from Patrimoine Médard bourgault

Faut-il censurer les nus de Médard Bourgault pour les rendre acceptables aujourd’hui? La question est mal posée. Ce n’est pas l’œuvre qui pose problème — c’est notre incapacité à la regarder autrement qu’à travers nos réflexes actuels. Un patrimoine ne s’adapte pas aux sensibilités du moment. Il exige d’être compris, même lorsqu’il dérange.


Une lecture contemporaine appliquée au passé

La remise en question des nus féminins dans l’œuvre de Médard Bourgault repose sur une confusion fondamentale : on juge une œuvre du passé à partir de catégories contemporaines, comme si son sens devait s’y conformer.

Or, une œuvre n’est pas interchangeable avec les sensibilités d’une époque. Elle porte en elle son contexte, ses contraintes, et la vision propre de l’artiste.


Le nu dans la tradition artistique

La représentation du corps humain — et du nu en particulier — traverse toute l’histoire de l’art. Elle ne peut être réduite à une seule lecture.

Elle a servi à exprimer :

  • la beauté
  • la fragilité
  • la dignité humaine
  • la présence du corps dans le monde

La réduire à une simple logique d’objectification revient à nier cette profondeur et à appauvrir radicalement la lecture de l’œuvre.

Chez Médard Bourgault, le nu s’inscrit dans une recherche de forme, d’équilibre et de vérité humaine. Il relève d’un regard sculptural, avant toute lecture idéologique.


Un élément essentiel : le contexte de création

Un fait est souvent oublié.

Médard lui-même devait, à son époque, cacher certaines de ses sculptures. Son environnement social et religieux imposait déjà des limites à ce qui pouvait être montré.

Le nu existait donc dans un espace de tension :

  • parfois dissimulé
  • parfois toléré
  • rarement pleinement assumé publiquement

Ce n’était pas une provocation. C’était un espace de liberté.


Une répétition du même mécanisme

Aujourd’hui, au nom de nouvelles sensibilités, on propose de retirer ou d’atténuer ces mêmes œuvres.

Autrement dit :

  • hier, le nu était contraint pour des raisons religieuses
  • aujourd’hui, il risque de l’être pour des raisons idéologiques

Le mécanisme reste le même.

Dans les deux cas, ce n’est pas l’œuvre qui change — c’est le regard qu’on cherche à lui imposer.

Censurer ces œuvres aujourd’hui ne constitue pas un progrès. C’est une continuité.


Patrimoine : comprendre ou corriger?

Un lieu patrimonial n’a pas pour rôle de filtrer le passé pour le rendre confortable.

Il doit :

  • transmettre
  • expliquer
  • contextualiser

Mais jamais transformer pour éviter toute friction.

Il existe une différence fondamentale :

Contextualiser, c’est éclairer une œuvre. Neutraliser, c’est la déformer.


Ce qui est en jeu

La question n’est pas de savoir si ces œuvres correspondent aux attentes actuelles.

La vraie question est :

souhaite-t-on transmettre fidèlement une œuvre, ou la réécrire pour qu’elle ne dérange plus?

Un patrimoine qui ne dérange plus est souvent un patrimoine qu’on a déjà vidé de son sens.


Raphaël Maltais Bourgault

 
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from An Open Letter

I had a rooftop barbecue and hot tub event with a friend, and L Brought her sister and her sister for some reason is just such a massive dick towards me specifically it feels like. There was only one other guy there, and that guy didn’t really interact with her but it felt like just disproportionately she was being very rude to me, like making comments about how people just must not have liked me for something completely unrelated, insulting the random playlist that was playing on my speaker saying that my music was elevator music, being excessively pedantic with rhetorical questions, when I jumped into the pool as I got up from the water I heard her calling me a fat ass, along with several other consistent just like negs it felt like. I don’t know what this girl’s problem is because her sister is nice, but she is just such a fucking dick it feels like and im pretty confident its not a signal towards me, like it is not a reflection on my behavior as much as it is on her. No one else not even her sister joined with her and other people kind of defended me at different points. But overall just fucking weird from her.

 
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from POTUSRoaster

Hello Again. I Hope you had a good Easter or Passover or other religious celebration of your choice.

Since the start of the unprovoked war with Iran, POTUS has told the country the reason for the conflict was that Iran had intentions for nuclear weapons and that could not be allowed.

We know that the majority of the nuclear material that Iran needs to build bombs is at a place called Pickaxe Mountain. This is a facility so deep in the mountains of central Iran that no bunker buster bomb in the American arsenal is powerful enough to destroy the place. Inspite of claims by POTUS that Iran's ability to create a bomb was destroyed almost a year ago, nothing is further from the truth. Of course everyone knows that nothing could be further from POTUS than the truth.

While we know that Iran has the ability to deliver ordinance to its perceived enemies, as evidenced by its continued bombing of its neighbors, it does not need to construct an ICBM bomb to permanently damage our country. Nuclear material spread with a common construction site explosive could leave huge portions of this country permanently poisoned for hundreds of years and many of us dead.

Sooner or later the people will recognize that this POTUS is a major danger to the country and must be removed. We have a chance to begin that process on the first Tuesday in November by creating a congress that is not afraid to do the job. Let's work to make that happens.

POTUS Roaster

Thanks for reading these posts that I write for you. To read others in this series, go to write.as/potusroaster/archive. I hope you have a great weekend.

 
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from Sean Barnett

Over the past few months I have been doing some technical reading. Well, actually a lot of technical reading, perhaps compensating for having not focused on multiprocessing and performance for some years. And, guess what? The technical world has changed.

I do hope to curate this list at some stage, but at least I've now captured some of the links so I don't lose track of them.

Multi-Processing (e.g., concurrency, multi-threading, asynchrony) * Promises * Zap * Brad Cypert Blog * Programming Languages Memory Model * Making Sense of Acquire Release Semantics * Miguel Young Blog * Algorithms for Modern Hardware * Work-Stealing Deque Part 1: The Problem with Locks

Performance (e.g., algorithms, SIMD, branchless coding) * Daniel Lemire, Computer Science Professor * Ash's Blog * Tutorial on SIMD vectorisation to speed up brute force * Josh Haberman Blog * Latency Numbers Every Programmer Should Know * Optimizing UTC –> Unix Time Conversion for Size and Speed

Zig * Open My Mind – Karl Seguin Blog

Geospatial * Gamdev Maths: distance from point to line * Find the Intersection of Two Line Segments in 2D (Easy Method)

Data Engineering * Jenna Jordan * Data Engineering Blog of Simon Späti * Spartan Blog – Jerónimo * The Evolution of Database Architecture and the Future of Data Management * Stop Paying the Complexity Tax * Big Data is Dead

 
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from Sean Barnett

  • time series geospatial data – each record has a timestamp and (in some cases) a geospatial position (typically WGS84 latitude and longitude)
  • durable – rather than ephemeral – each record
  • idempotent – in context of at least once delivery semantics
  • commutative – same result regardless of order in which data records are received, including the case that the output is dependent upon multiple records
 
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from Millennial Survival

Sometimes I wonder how organizations can function and survive. If you are hiring for important roles, maybe you should put some thought into coordinating the process effectively when using multiple recruiting agencies.

When you have multiple agencies contact you about the same role, at the same company, but with entirely different messages it destroys any trust the candidate has in the process. It is even better when one agency tells you how confidential the search is and won’t even disclose the name of their client without an NDA, yet another will happily divulge the name of the client without an NDA. The cherry on top is when the organization looking to hire should absolutely know how to go about hiring for a role of this caliber without making these basic mistakes.

All of this adds up to making any prospective candidate want to run away from the process as fast as possible. After all, if an organization can’t manage to coordinate the hiring process, how can they possibly be any less dysfunctional internally? Seriously, do better. Otherwise assume you will never find someone other than a person that is too dense to see past the red flags presented during the hiring process. That isn’t a recipe for long-term success.

 
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from Roscoe's Story

In Summary: * Listening to the Cubs best the Mets this afternoon was the most ambitious thing I did all day. Several hours of listening to music filled the rest of this Friday. Now it's nearly time to focus on the night prayers and get ready for bed.

Prayers, etc.: * I have a daily prayer regimen I try to follow throughout the day from early morning, as soon as I roll out of bed, until head hits pillow at night. Details of that regimen are linked to my link tree, which is linked to my profile page here.

Starting Ash Wednesday, 2026, I've added this daily prayer as part of the Prayer Crusade Preceding the 2026 SSPX Episcopal Consecrations.

Health Metrics: * bw= 234.57 lbs. * bp= 151/90 (71)

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

Diet: * 05:20 – 1 banana * 06:30 – seafood salad, cheese, crackers * 11:45 – 1 bacon and egg breakfast taco, 1 bean and cheese breakfast taco * 12:00 – home made meat and vegetable soup

Activities, Chores, etc.: * 04:00 – listen to local news talk radio * 05:15 – bank accounts activity monitored. * 05:40- read, write, pray, follow news reports from various sources, surf the socials, nap. * 11:00 – listen to the Markley, van Camp and Robbins Show * 11:45 – watch old game shows and eat lunch at home with Sylvia * 13:20 – follow an MLB Game, Mets vs Cubs, and.... Cubs win, 12 to 4. * 16:30 – listen to relaxing music and nap

Chess: * 17:00 – moved in all CC games

 
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from SmarterArticles

The robots were supposed to take our jobs. Instead, they are sorting us into winners and losers while we argue about the wrong question entirely.

For the better part of three years, the dominant anxiety about artificial intelligence in the workplace has been binary: will it replace us, or won't it? Governments have convened panels. Think tanks have published forecasts. CEOs have made pledges about “responsible deployment.” And through all of it, the conversation has orbited a single, dramatic scenario: mass displacement, a wave of redundancies, the hollowing out of the white-collar middle class.

But in March 2026, Anthropic, the San Francisco-based AI company behind the Claude family of large language models, published a piece of labour market research that quietly reframed the entire debate. Their study, “Labor market impacts of AI: A new measure and early evidence,” introduced a novel metric called “observed exposure” and used millions of real Claude interactions mapped against roughly 800 occupations in the O*NET database to measure not what AI could theoretically do to jobs, but what it is actually doing right now. The headline finding was almost anticlimactic: AI is not yet replacing jobs at scale. There has been no systematic rise in unemployment among workers in the most AI-exposed occupations.

The less comfortable finding, buried deeper in the data, was this: AI is already creating a measurable skills divide. Hiring of workers aged 22 to 25 in highly exposed occupations has dropped roughly 14 percent compared to pre-ChatGPT levels. The researchers noted this finding was “just barely statistically significant,” but the directional signal is hard to ignore. The first measurable labour market effect of generative AI is not a pink slip. It is a closed door.

And that might be worse.

The Gap Between Can and Does

Anthropic's study is notable not for what it predicts but for what it measures. Previous attempts to gauge AI's impact on employment, including the widely cited 2023 research by Eloundou and colleagues, relied on theoretical exposure: estimating whether a large language model could, in principle, make a given task at least twice as fast. By that measure, the numbers look staggering. Theoretical AI coverage for Computer and Mathematical occupations sits at 94 percent. For Office and Administrative Support roles, it is 90 percent.

But theoretical capability is not the same as economic reality. Anthropic's observed exposure metric tracks what is actually happening in professional settings by counting which tasks show sufficient work-related usage in Claude traffic, then weighting fully automated implementations at full value and augmentative use (where humans remain in the loop) at half weight. The result is a far more sober picture. In Computer and Mathematical roles, Claude currently covers just 33 percent of tasks. For the most exposed individual occupations, the figures are higher but still well below ceiling: programmers at 74.5 percent, customer service representatives at 70.1 percent, and data entry clerks at 67.1 percent.

At the other end of the spectrum, theoretical AI coverage is lowest in grounds maintenance at just 3.9 percent, followed by transportation at 12.1 percent, agriculture at 15.7 percent, food and serving at 16.9 percent, and construction at 16.9 percent. The divide is not merely between AI-proficient workers and everyone else. It is between entire categories of work that exist in fundamentally different relationships to the technology.

The gap between theoretical and observed exposure is, in a sense, the breathing room the labour market currently enjoys. But it is also a measure of latent disruption. As Anthropic's researchers note, tracking how that gap narrows over time provides a real-time indicator of economic transformation as it unfolds. The question is not whether AI can reshape these occupations. It is how quickly the observed line catches up to the theoretical one.

Anthropic's earlier Economic Index report, published in January 2026, provides additional context. That study, based on a privacy-preserving analysis of two million AI conversations split between consumer and enterprise use, found that in early 2025, 36 percent of occupations used Claude for at least a quarter of their tasks. By the time data was pooled across subsequent reports, that figure had risen to 49 percent. The trajectory is clear. What was niche behaviour a year ago is becoming standard practice for nearly half of all tracked occupations. And for the workers on the wrong side of the emerging divide, the pace of that convergence matters enormously.

Power Users and the Compounding Loop

If Anthropic's research tells us what AI is doing to the labour market in aggregate, a separate body of evidence reveals what it is doing to individual workers. And here the picture is sharper, more unequal, and considerably more troubling.

OpenAI's 2025 State of Enterprise AI report documented a sixfold productivity gap between power users and everyone else. Workers at the 95th percentile of AI adoption send six times as many messages to ChatGPT as the median employee at the same companies. For coding tasks specifically, the heaviest users engage 17 times more frequently than their typical peers. Among data analysts, the most active users employ AI data analysis tools 16 times more often than the median. Over the past year, weekly messages in ChatGPT Enterprise increased roughly eightfold, and the average worker sends 30 percent more messages than they did a year prior. Seventy-five percent of enterprise users report being able to complete entirely new tasks they previously could not perform.

The numbers translate directly into time. Workers who applied AI to seven or more distinct tasks reported saving over 10 hours per week. Those using it for fewer than three tasks reported no time savings at all. This is not a gentle gradient. It is a cliff edge.

What makes this particularly consequential is the compounding nature of the advantage. Workers who experiment broadly with AI discover more uses, which leads to greater productivity gains and better performance reviews, which leads to more interesting assignments and faster advancement, which in turn provides more opportunity and incentive to deepen AI usage further. The Debevoise Data Blog described this dynamic in January 2026 as a self-reinforcing cycle: “AI success leads to more AI success,” with early adopters developing intuitions and workflow habits that simply cannot be shortcut by intensive late-stage training. Organisations that wait until 2027 to address their AI skills gap, the analysis argued, will find themselves competing for a shrinking pool of trainable talent against firms that started building capability in 2024 and 2025. Those firms that are ahead now will find it relatively easy to stay ahead, the analysis continued, especially if they can recruit talent away from firms that have fallen behind.

Gensler's 2026 Global Workplace Survey, which polled 16,459 full-time office workers across 16 countries, adds another dimension. About 30 percent of employees now qualify as AI power users, defined as people who regularly use AI tools in both professional and personal contexts. More than half of these power users are under 40, and nearly a third are managers. These workers score significantly higher on innovation, engagement, and team relationships. They spend less time working alone (37 percent of their week versus 42 percent for late adopters) and more time learning (12 percent versus 8 percent) and socialising (11 percent versus 9 percent). Seventy percent of AI power users say learning is highly critical to their job performance. They are three times more likely to perceive their organisations as among the most innovative in the sample.

This is not the profile of someone coasting on a productivity hack. It is the profile of someone whose entire relationship to work has been restructured around a new set of capabilities, and whose career trajectory is diverging from peers who have not made the same transition.

Who Falls Behind, and Why It Is Not Random

The demographics of AI exposure complicate any simple narrative about technology helping the little guy. Anthropic's research found that workers in the most exposed professions “are more likely to be older, female, more educated, and higher-paid.” This inverts the usual pattern of technological disruption, where low-skilled, low-wage workers bear the heaviest costs. AI's first targets are not factory floors or retail counters. They are the knowledge-work occupations that have historically offered stable, well-compensated careers.

At the same time, the youth hiring slowdown suggests that the entry points to those careers are narrowing. If organisations can get 33 percent of a junior analyst's work done through an AI system, the calculus around hiring a new graduate changes. You do not necessarily fire the senior analyst. You simply do not replace the intern. The result is an invisible contraction: no layoffs, no headlines, just a quiet thinning of opportunity at the bottom of the professional ladder. As Anthropic's researchers cautioned, the young workers who are not hired may be remaining at their existing jobs, taking different jobs, or returning to education. The displacement, if that is even the right word, is diffuse and hard to track through conventional unemployment statistics.

This matters because early career experience has always been the mechanism through which workers build the skills, networks, and institutional knowledge that drive later advancement. A 22-year-old who spends two years doing data cleaning, attending meetings, and learning the rhythms of a professional environment is accumulating human capital that no online course can replicate. If AI shrinks the pool of those formative roles, the long-term consequences extend well beyond the immediate hiring numbers. It creates a generational bottleneck: not a single event, but a gradual narrowing of the pipeline through which junior talent enters and eventually rises within knowledge-work professions.

The World Economic Forum's Future of Jobs Report 2025 projected that 170 million new jobs will be created globally by 2030, while 92 million will be displaced, yielding a net gain of 78 million positions. But the same report warned that 59 percent of the global workforce will need reskilling or upskilling by 2030, and that 120 million workers face medium-term risk of redundancy if training systems fail to keep pace. The skills gap, the report noted, is the single most significant obstacle to business transformation, cited by 63 percent of employers. By 2030, 77 percent of employers plan to prioritise reskilling and upskilling their workforce to enhance collaboration with AI systems. The intent is there. Whether the execution will match the ambition is another question entirely.

The question is whether the workers who need reskilling most are the same ones who are positioned to receive it. The evidence suggests they are not.

The Training Paradox

Corporate AI training is booming. It is also, by most measures, failing.

A February 2026 DataCamp and YouGov survey of 517 business leaders in the United States and United Kingdom found that 82 percent of enterprise leaders say their organisation provides some form of AI training. And yet 59 percent of those same leaders report an AI skills gap within their workforce. Only 35 percent say they have a mature, organisation-wide upskilling programme in place. The access is there. The capability is not.

The problem, according to DataCamp's analysis, is structural. Most corporate AI training still follows a passive, course-based model: video lectures, multiple-choice assessments, completion certificates. Twenty-three percent of leaders surveyed said video-based courses make it difficult for employees to apply skills in the real world. The training exists in a vacuum, disconnected from the actual workflows where AI tools would be used. Workers complete modules and tick boxes, but the gap between knowing what a large language model is and knowing how to restructure your daily work around one remains vast.

This finding aligns with the EY 2025 Work Reimagined Survey, which polled 15,000 employees and 1,500 employers across 29 countries and found that organisations are missing up to 40 percent of potential AI productivity gains due to gaps in talent strategy. Among organisations experiencing AI-driven productivity improvements (96 percent of those investing in AI), only 17 percent reported that those gains led to reduced headcount. Far more were reinvesting in new AI capabilities (42 percent), cybersecurity (41 percent), research and development (39 percent), and employee upskilling (38 percent).

The pattern is revealing. Organisations are spending on AI training. They are not firing people because of AI. But they are also not succeeding at turning their existing workforce into proficient AI users at anything close to the speed required. The result is a two-track system within organisations: a minority of self-motivated power users who are pulling ahead, and a majority who have attended the workshops but have not fundamentally changed how they work.

McKinsey's January 2025 report on “Superagency in the workplace” put this disconnect in stark terms. While 92 percent of companies plan to increase AI investments over the next three years, only 1 percent report that they have reached what McKinsey considers AI maturity. The report also found that employees are three times more likely than leaders expect to be using generative AI for at least 30 percent of their daily work. Nearly half of C-suite leaders believe their companies are moving too slowly on AI development, citing leadership misalignment and lack of talent as the primary obstacles. The gap is not just between workers and AI. It is between what organisations think is happening with AI adoption and what is actually happening on the ground.

DataCamp's research found that organisations with mature, workforce-wide upskilling programmes are nearly twice as likely to report significant positive AI return on investment. The implication is clear: the training itself is not the bottleneck. The quality, structure, and integration of training into daily work is what separates organisations that capture AI value from those that do not. And that distinction maps uncomfortably well onto existing inequalities in corporate resources, management quality, and organisational culture.

The Wage Premium and the Widening Gulf

PwC's 2025 Global AI Jobs Barometer, which analysed close to a billion job advertisements from six continents, quantified the financial dimension of the AI skills divide. Jobs requiring AI skills now command a 56 percent wage premium over comparable roles, more than double the 25 percent premium recorded the previous year. Skills demands in AI-exposed occupations are changing 66 percent faster than in other roles, up from 25 percent the year before. And jobs requiring AI skills are growing 7.5 percent year on year, even as total job postings fell 11.3 percent.

These numbers describe an accelerating divergence. Workers who acquire and maintain AI proficiency are not just keeping pace; they are pulling away from the pack in measurable economic terms. A 56 percent wage premium is not a marginal advantage. It is the kind of differential that, compounded over a career, produces fundamentally different life outcomes: different housing, different schools for children, different retirement trajectories.

The acceleration is equally significant. When skill demands change 66 percent faster in one set of occupations than in others, the half-life of any given training investment shrinks accordingly. A worker who completes an AI literacy course in 2026 may find its content partially obsolete by 2027. This creates a treadmill effect that disproportionately burdens workers with less time, fewer resources, and less institutional support for continuous learning. It also creates a recruitment spiral. Workers with AI skills command higher salaries, which means they gravitate towards organisations that already have strong AI cultures, which further concentrates capability in firms that are already ahead.

PwC's data also contained a counterintuitive finding: productivity growth has nearly quadrupled in industries most exposed to AI, rising from 7 percent over the 2018 to 2022 period to 27 percent over 2018 to 2024 in sectors like financial services and software publishing. Jobs continue to grow even in the most easily automated roles. AI, in other words, is making people more valuable, not less. But the value accrues unevenly, and the distribution of that value tracks closely with the distribution of AI competence.

The Five-and-a-Half Trillion Dollar Question

IDC, the technology research firm, has put a price tag on the AI skills gap: $5.5 trillion in projected global economic losses by 2026, stemming from delayed products, quality issues, missed revenue, and impaired competitiveness. Over 90 percent of global enterprises, by IDC's estimate, will face critical AI skills shortages. Ninety-four percent of CEOs and CHROs identify AI as their top in-demand skill, yet only 35 percent feel they have adequately prepared their employees. Only a third of employees report receiving any AI training in the past year, even as half of employers report difficulty filling AI-related positions.

The scale of the mismatch is staggering. There are currently 1.6 million open AI positions globally, against approximately 518,000 qualified candidates, a demand-to-supply ratio of roughly 3.2 to 1. And the positions going unfilled are not niche research roles at frontier labs. They are the applied, mid-level positions where AI tools meet business operations: the prompt engineers, the automation specialists, the analysts who can bridge the gap between a model's capabilities and an organisation's needs.

The barriers to closing this gap are not mysterious. IDC's research identified the key obstacles as lack of talent (46 percent), data privacy concerns (43 percent), poor data quality (40 percent), high implementation costs (40 percent), and unclear return on investment for AI programmes (26 percent). These are not exotic challenges. They are the ordinary frictions of organisational change, amplified by the speed at which AI capabilities are advancing.

IDC projects that AI technologies themselves will eventually shave about a trillion dollars off skill-gap losses by 2027, as AI tools become more intuitive and self-service. But that still leaves trillions in unrealised value, and it assumes a level of organisational readiness that the DataCamp and EY surveys suggest is far from guaranteed.

The irony is hard to miss. The tool that is supposed to democratise knowledge work is, in its current deployment phase, concentrating advantage among those who already have the skills, resources, and institutional support to learn how to use it. AI's promise of universal empowerment remains real. Its present reality is stratification.

Structural Shift or Growing Pains

The critical question embedded in all of this data is whether the AI skills divide is a temporary adjustment, a transitional friction that will smooth out as tools improve and training catches up, or a permanent structural feature of the labour market.

The case for optimism rests on several reasonable premises. AI tools are becoming more user-friendly with each generation. Natural language interfaces have dramatically lowered the barrier to entry compared to previous waves of technology. Companies are investing heavily in training, even if current programmes are imperfect. PwC's data shows that AI is creating jobs and boosting productivity broadly, not just for an elite few. And 85 percent of organisations plan to increase their investment in upskilling employees through the period from 2025 to 2030, according to multiple industry surveys.

But the case for structural concern is stronger, and it rests on the compounding dynamics that multiple independent studies have now documented. The Debevoise analysis identified a self-reinforcing cycle where early AI adopters develop capabilities that accelerate their further adoption, creating a widening gap that late entrants cannot easily close. OpenAI's data shows a sixfold productivity differential that maps onto usage intensity. Anthropic's observed exposure metric reveals that even within occupations theoretically saturated by AI capability, actual adoption is unevenly distributed.

The OECD's 2025 report on bridging the AI skills gap acknowledged that current adult training systems “often favour those already advantaged by higher education, widening opportunity gaps.” The report recommended that governments expand incentives for AI training, improve accessibility and inclusivity, and invest in modular credentials and recognition of prior learning. These are sensible policy proposals. They are also the kind of recommendations that take years to implement and decades to show results.

Meanwhile, the compounding loop runs at the speed of quarterly performance reviews and annual promotion cycles. Every month that a power user pulls further ahead is a month that makes the gap harder to close. Every junior role that goes unfilled because AI handles part of its function is a career pathway that becomes slightly narrower. The structural argument is not that these trends are irreversible. It is that they are self-reinforcing, and that the window for intervention narrows with each passing quarter.

What Organisations Get Wrong

The most common corporate response to the AI skills divide is to treat it as a training problem. It is not. It is a management problem, a culture problem, and, increasingly, a strategic problem.

Training, as the DataCamp survey makes clear, is a necessary but insufficient condition for building AI capability. What separates organisations that successfully embed AI into their workflows from those that do not is not the availability of courses but the integration of AI tools into actual work processes, with management support, performance incentives, and tolerance for experimentation. McKinsey's superagency report found that 48 percent of employees rank training as the most important factor for AI adoption, but training alone, without the organisational scaffolding to support its application, produces graduates who know the theory but cannot implement it.

The EY survey found that 96 percent of organisations investing in AI report some productivity gains. But the distribution of those gains within organisations is wildly uneven, with a handful of power users capturing the majority of value while the broader workforce remains largely unchanged. This suggests that the barrier is not technological but organisational: the tools work, but most organisations have not restructured roles, workflows, and incentives to make broad adoption possible.

Companies that lead in AI adoption, according to OpenAI's enterprise report, enjoy 1.7 times higher revenue growth, 3.6 times greater total shareholder return, and 1.6 times higher EBIT margins compared to laggards. The correlation between AI adoption and financial performance is becoming impossible to ignore. And yet the mechanisms for spreading AI proficiency remain largely ad hoc, dependent on individual initiative rather than systematic organisational design.

This is the paradox at the heart of the AI skills divide. The technology is genuinely democratising in its potential. Anyone with access to a large language model can, in theory, perform analyses, draft documents, and automate workflows that previously required specialist expertise. But “in theory” is doing a lot of heavy lifting. In practice, the workers who extract the most value from AI are those who already possess the skills, confidence, and institutional support to experiment effectively. The tool is egalitarian. The context in which it is deployed is not.

The Policy Vacuum

Government responses to the AI skills divide have been, with some exceptions, sluggish and incremental. The OECD has called for expanded AI training incentives, improved accessibility, and investment in connected learning pathways that allow workers to move more fluidly between vocational and academic routes. The European Parliament has commissioned research on AI's role in reshaping the European workforce. The World Economic Forum continues to publish increasingly urgent reports about the scale of reskilling required.

But the gap between policy aspiration and implementation remains wide. Most OECD countries do not yet have comprehensive AI literacy programmes targeted at working adults. Funding for reskilling tends to flow through existing institutional channels, which, as the OECD itself acknowledges, “often favour those already advantaged by higher education.” The workers most at risk of falling behind are precisely the ones least served by current policy frameworks: those without degrees, without employer-sponsored training, without the time or resources for self-directed learning.

The speed mismatch is perhaps the most critical issue. AI capabilities are advancing on a timeline measured in months. Policy responses operate on a timeline measured in years, sometimes decades. By the time a government commission has completed its review, published its recommendations, secured funding, designed a programme, and enrolled its first cohort of learners, the AI landscape will have shifted beneath their feet. The skills taught in 2026 may be partially obsolete by 2028. The OECD's own recommendation for “modular credentials and recognition of prior learning” implicitly acknowledges this problem: long-form educational programmes are too slow for a technology that rewrites its own capabilities every few months.

This does not mean policy is futile. It means that policy alone cannot solve the problem. Effective responses will require coordination between governments, employers, educational institutions, and the AI companies themselves. They will require a willingness to experiment with new models of training delivery, credentialing, and workforce support. And they will require an honest reckoning with the fact that the AI skills divide is not simply a technical challenge to be solved with better courses. It is a distributional challenge that reflects, and threatens to amplify, existing structures of inequality.

What Comes Next

Anthropic's March 2026 study offered one final, underappreciated insight. The gap between theoretical and observed AI exposure is not closing uniformly across occupations. In some fields, adoption is accelerating rapidly. In others, it has barely begun. The trajectory of that convergence will determine, more than any other single factor, how deeply AI reshapes the labour market over the next five years.

If observed exposure converges slowly, there is time for training systems, policy responses, and organisational practices to adapt. Workers can build skills incrementally. Institutions can adjust. The transition, while painful, remains manageable.

If it converges quickly, as improvements in AI capability, agentic workflows, and enterprise integration suggest it might, the window for orderly adaptation shrinks dramatically. The 14 percent decline in youth hiring that Anthropic documented could become 30 percent, or 50 percent. The sixfold productivity gap between power users and everyone else could widen further. The 56 percent wage premium for AI-skilled workers could calcify into a permanent feature of the labour market, as entrenched and as difficult to reverse as any existing dimension of economic inequality.

The honest answer to whether AI's skills divide is temporary or structural is that it is both, simultaneously, and the balance between those two possibilities depends on choices being made right now, in boardrooms and government offices and training departments around the world. The technology does not predetermine the outcome. But the compounding dynamics are real, the clock is running, and the workers who are falling behind today are accumulating disadvantages that will become progressively harder to reverse.

The robots did not take the jobs. They created a new hierarchy within them. And unless something changes, that hierarchy is hardening fast.

References and Sources

  1. Anthropic, “Labor market impacts of AI: A new measure and early evidence,” Anthropic Research, March 2026. https://www.anthropic.com/research/labor-market-impacts

  2. Anthropic, “Anthropic Economic Index report: Economic primitives,” January 2026. https://www.anthropic.com/research/anthropic-economic-index-january-2026-report

  3. Fortune, “Anthropic just mapped out which jobs AI could potentially replace. A 'Great Recession for white-collar workers' is absolutely possible,” March 6, 2026. https://fortune.com/2026/03/06/ai-job-losses-report-anthropic-research-great-recession-for-white-collar-workers/

  4. Fortune, “Is AI about to take your job? New Anthropic research suggests the answer is more complicated than you think,” March 10, 2026. https://fortune.com/2026/03/10/will-ai-take-your-job-this-chart-in-an-economic-study-by-anthropic-may-give-you-a-hint-but-the-answer-is-complicated/

  5. OpenAI, “The State of Enterprise AI: 2025 Report,” 2025. https://openai.com/index/the-state-of-enterprise-ai-2025-report/

  6. VentureBeat, “OpenAI report reveals a 6x productivity gap between AI power users and everyone else,” 2025. https://venturebeat.com/ai/openai-report-reveals-a-6x-productivity-gap-between-ai-power-users-and

  7. Debevoise Data Blog, “AI Advantages Tend to Compound, Increasing the Risks of Falling Too Far Behind,” January 7, 2026. https://www.debevoisedatablog.com/2026/01/07/ai-advantages-tend-to-compound-increasing-the-risks-of-falling-too-far-behind/

  8. Gensler Research Institute, “Global Workplace Survey 2026,” 2026. https://www.gensler.com/gri/global-workplace-survey-2026

  9. Gensler, “The Human Side of AI: What Power Users Are Telling Us About the Workplace,” 2026. https://www.gensler.com/blog/what-ai-power-users-tell-us-about-the-workplace

  10. DataCamp and YouGov, “Companies Are Investing in AI, But Their Workforces Aren't Ready,” February 2026. https://www.datacamp.com/blog/the-ai-skills-gap-in-2026-why-most-ai-training-isn-t-translating-to-workforce-capability

  11. EY, “AI-driven productivity is fueling reinvestment over workforce reductions,” December 2025. https://www.ey.com/en_us/newsroom/2025/12/ai-driven-productivity-is-fueling-reinvestment-over-workforce-reductions

  12. EY, “EY survey reveals companies are missing out on up to 40% of AI productivity gains due to gaps in talent strategy,” November 2025. https://www.ey.com/en_gl/newsroom/2025/11/ey-survey-reveals-companies-are-missing-out-on-up-to-40-percent-of-ai-productivity-gains-due-to-gaps-in-talent-strategy

  13. PwC, “The Fearless Future: 2025 Global AI Jobs Barometer,” 2025. https://www.pwc.com/gx/en/services/ai/ai-jobs-barometer.html

  14. IDC via CIO Dive, “What's the cost of the IT skills gap? IDC says $5.5 trillion by 2026,” 2025. https://www.ciodive.com/news/tech-talent-skills-gaps-cost-trillions-idc/716523/

  15. World Economic Forum, “Future of Jobs Report 2025,” January 2025. https://www.weforum.org/publications/the-future-of-jobs-report-2025/

  16. OECD, “Bridging the AI skills gap,” 2025. https://www.oecd.org/en/publications/bridging-the-ai-skills-gap_66d0702e-en.html

  17. McKinsey, “Superagency in the workplace: Empowering people to unlock AI's full potential at work,” January 2025. https://www.mckinsey.com/capabilities/tech-and-ai/our-insights/superagency-in-the-workplace-empowering-people-to-unlock-ais-full-potential-at-work

  18. HR Dive, “Anthropic: AI's influence over the labor market is only beginning to be felt,” March 2026. https://www.hrdive.com/news/anthropic-ai-influence-over-the-labor-market-jobs/814670/

  19. TechCrunch, “The AI skills gap is here, says AI company, and power users are pulling ahead,” March 25, 2026. https://techcrunch.com/2026/03/25/the-ai-skills-gap-is-here-says-ai-company-and-power-users-are-pulling-ahead/

  20. The Decoder, “Anthropic's new study shows AI is nowhere near its theoretical job disruption potential,” March 2026. https://the-decoder.com/anthropics-new-study-shows-ai-is-nowhere-near-its-theoretical-job-disruption-potential/

  21. Workera, “The $5.5 Trillion Skills Gap: What IDC's New Report Reveals About AI Workforce Readiness,” 2025. https://www.workera.ai/blog/the-5-5-trillion-skills-gap-what-idcs-new-report-reveals-about-ai-workforce-readiness


Tim Green

Tim Green UK-based Systems Theorist & Independent Technology Writer

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

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

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

 
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from TechNewsLit Explores

On Tuesday (14 April 2026), Rep. Ro Khanna, a Democratic member of Congress from California, spoke at the National Press Club about his vision for the country and answered questions from Mark Schoeff, NPC president and financial services correspondent for CQ-Roll Call. The event should put to rest any questions of Khanna running for president.

Exclusive photos from Khanna’s event at the National Press Club are available in the TechNewsLit portfolio at the Alamy photo agency.

Khanna became well known for his work on the House Oversight Committee to release the Department of Justice’s files on convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. Despite deadlines written into legislation passed by Congress and signed by the president, DoJ has yet to release all of the files, and recently fired Attorney General Pam Bondi has so far ignored a subpoena to appear before the commitee on this topic.

While Khanna made several references to Epstein and the files, he framed many of his arguments on economic inequality in terms of the “Epstein Class” vs. most everyone else. In Khanna’s view, the Epstein Class is made up of super-rich individuals who feel their wealth and power makes them exempt from laws all others must obey. Their disrespect for sex offender laws is just one example.

Khanna’s main pitch was for plans with bold direct actions addressing economic inequality: universal health care, affordable child care, faster conversion to green energy, and more support for college or vocational education. He said reversing the Trump tax cuts and ending the blank check for defense spending would pay for those programs.

Khanna noted that incrementalist or technocratic proposals from Democrats only got Donald Trump elected twice. He also said Sen. Chuck Schumer (D-NY), should step down from his Democatic Party leader post. Khanna did not say anything about Rep. Hakeem Jeffries (D-NY), the party leader in the House where he serves.

Copyright © Technology News and Literature. All rights reserved.

 
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from Douglas Vandergraph

Before the first plane came in low over Sunset Park, before the dog walkers showed up with coffee in their hands and before the city decided what face it was going to put on for the day, Jesus knelt near the water and prayed. The grass was still damp. The air held that strange hour when Las Vegas looked less like a promise and more like a body that had not slept. The Strip glowed in the distance like it was still trying to convince somebody of something, but out there near the dark edge of the park, with the palms standing still and the sky only beginning to thin at the horizon, there was no performance left. There was only the soft sound of His voice as He spoke to the Father, steady and near, like a man who did not need noise to know where He was. He stayed there a long time, quiet enough that most people would have missed Him if they had passed by. When He opened His eyes, the city was waking. Not all at once. Not beautifully. Just honestly.

A white Toyota sat crooked across two spaces near the far end of the lot. The engine was off, but someone was inside. Jesus saw the shape of a woman leaning forward over the steering wheel with both hands locked at the back of her neck like she was trying to hold herself together from the outside. He rose from the grass, brushed the damp from His knees, and walked toward the car with the same calm He had brought to prayer. He did not hurry. He did not hesitate. By the time He reached the driver’s side window, the woman had sat up and dragged the heel of her hand across her face. She looked close to forty, maybe a little younger, but exhaustion had a way of adding years without asking permission. Her hair was pulled back in a loose knot that had half-fallen apart. There was a cracked phone in the passenger seat beside an open power bill, a yellow school envelope, and a bottle of pills with no label on it. When she saw Him, she flinched the way tired people do when the world catches them unguarded.

“You all right?” Jesus asked.

It was such a plain question that it almost made her angry. Not because He had done anything wrong, but because all the words people used when they knew you were not all right were usually a waste of breath. She stared at Him through the glass for a second, then rolled the window down two inches.

“I’m fine,” she said.

Jesus looked at her for a moment with the kind of patience that made false answers feel thin. “No,” He said gently. “You are not.”

That should have ended it. In a city like Las Vegas, people learn early to mind their own business. They learn how to walk past tears, how to pretend not to hear raised voices through apartment walls, how to keep moving when somebody’s whole life is spilling out in public. She could have rolled the window up and backed out and left Him standing there in the gray morning. Instead she gave a short laugh with no life in it and looked away.

“My daughter said I was a liar,” she said. “That was about an hour ago. Then she walked out. I had to leave before I said something worse.”

Jesus said nothing right away. He waited.

The woman looked at Him again and this time there was more anger than fear. “And before you ask, yes, she is probably right.”

“What is your name?”

“Lidia.”

“Lidia,” He said, as if the name mattered enough to be set down carefully, “how long have you been carrying this alone?”

She almost told Him to leave her alone. The words rose and stopped somewhere in her chest. Maybe it was the way He asked it. Maybe it was the fact that He did not sound curious. He sounded like someone who already understood the weight and was only asking how long it had been there.

“Long enough,” she said. “Too long.”

She opened the door and stepped out because sitting there suddenly made her feel trapped. Up close she looked even more worn down. She had on black scrub pants and a faded gray zip-up jacket over a housekeeping polo from Bellagio. Her name badge was clipped upside down. She noticed and turned it right side up like that small act still mattered. Jesus glanced once toward the east where the sky had gone from charcoal to dull blue. A few birds skimmed low over the water. Somewhere beyond the park, a siren wailed and disappeared.

“I have to be at Sunrise with my father in an hour,” Lidia said, as if continuing a conversation they had already been having. “Then I have a shift this afternoon. My daughter Brianna found the shutoff notice in the kitchen drawer. She found the bank statement too. She asked me where the college money went and I told her I moved it around. She looked right at me and said, ‘You always say things like that when you mean something bad happened and you’re ashamed to tell the truth.’” Lidia swallowed and folded her arms tight across herself. “Then she told me she was done living in a house where everybody acts like everything’s under control when it’s not.”

Jesus listened without interruption.

“The money’s gone,” Lidia said. “Not all at once. Rent. My dad’s medicine. Groceries. Car repairs. That stupid air conditioner last summer when it was one hundred and fifteen degrees and my father could barely breathe. I kept thinking I would put it back before she knew. I kept thinking I could fix it.” She laughed again, but it broke in the middle. “That is the story of my life lately. I keep thinking I can fix it before anybody finds out how bad it is.”

Jesus looked at the papers inside the car but did not pick them up. “And can you?”

She met His eyes for the first time without looking away. “No.”

There was no pity in His face. There was no shock either. Only recognition. That almost undid her more than judgment would have.

“Come walk with Me,” He said.

“I don’t have time to walk.”

“You do not have time not to.”

She stared at Him like she was deciding whether He was strange or wise or both. Then she locked the car because sometimes people say yes before they understand why. They left the lot and moved along the edge of the park where the first light was touching the water. Lidia kept talking in bursts, not because she trusted Him yet, but because once the truth starts moving after being trapped too long, it does not come out in perfect order. She told Him about her father Raul, how he used to do electrical work all over the valley and now forgot whether he had taken his pills. She told Him about Brianna, seventeen and sharp and angry and smarter than Lidia knew how to keep up with. She told Him there had been a time when she sang in church and believed God saw her. Then work got heavier and money got tighter and prayer started feeling like one more thing she was failing at. She told Him she had taken on extra rooms, then extra shifts, then cash advances against paychecks, then one small payday loan that turned into two more. She told Him that every month felt like running through deep water while the shore kept moving.

Jesus did not correct her. He did not rush to make a lesson out of her pain. He walked beside her like a man who was not afraid of where honesty might lead.

When they reached the sidewalk near South Eastern Avenue, He asked, “Where did Brianna go?”

“She said she was staying with her friend Tessa.” Lidia rubbed her forehead. “That can mean a dozen places. Sometimes they sit at Boulevard Mall because nobody bothers them there if they keep moving. Sometimes they end up at the food court. Sometimes at that bus stop on Maryland where people wait forever and act like that counts as a plan.”

“She wants you to tell her the truth.”

“She wants more than that.”

“Yes,” Jesus said. “She wants a mother she does not have to read around.”

That hit hard enough that Lidia stopped walking. No one had ever put it that way. People had told her to be strong. They had told her to keep her head up. They had told her not to burden the kids with adult problems. They had told her to pray more, budget better, trust God, work harder, apply elsewhere, cut this, sell that, wait it out. Nobody had said the thing beneath all of it. Brianna was tired of living inside a managed version of reality. Brianna was tired of having to guess what was breaking.

Lidia breathed out slow. “You don’t know me.”

Jesus turned to face her. “I know what fear does to love when it is left in charge.”

She looked away. Cars were building now. A city bus hissed to a stop half a block ahead and then pulled off again. Somewhere across the street a man in a neon work vest unlocked the door of a small coffee stand. Lidia felt the whole day pressing at once. Her father’s appointment. Her shift. The rent. Brianna. The loan place on East Flamingo where she had planned to go after Sunrise and sign away her title for enough money to stay afloat another month. She had not told anyone that part. She had not even admitted to herself how desperate it was until the thought of it stopped feeling extreme.

Jesus started walking again and she followed.

By the time they reached Maryland Parkway, the day had turned fully practical. Traffic moved with that hard early rhythm of people who were already late. The bus shelter held a man in paint-stained jeans, a woman in black non-slip shoes staring at her phone, and a teenager nodding off with a backpack between his knees. Jesus stood with them as if He belonged there. Lidia kept watching Him from the corner of her eye because there was nothing in Him that asked to be noticed and somehow He still stood apart from everything around Him. He was dressed plainly. Nothing about Him tried to announce itself. Still, people settled when He was near, even if they could not have explained why. The woman in the work shoes had been muttering under her breath about missing a shift, but when Jesus stepped aside so the older man with a cane could take the bench, she went quiet and stood up straighter, as if some better part of her had been reminded it still existed.

The 109 came groaning up the lane and the doors folded open. Lidia climbed on and reached for her pass. Jesus followed and sat beside her halfway down the aisle. The bus smelled like tired clothes, coffee, and cold air pushing too hard through dirty vents. A digital ad near the ceiling flashed bright promises for luxury living, then legal help, then a concert residency on the Strip. Lidia stared at it and felt a flash of disgust. In Las Vegas everything was always selling a cleaner life to people who were barely hanging on inside the one they had.

“You hate this city sometimes,” Jesus said.

She gave Him a look. “Sometimes?”

“What do you hate?”

Lidia folded the bus pass between her fingers. “I hate that it teaches people how to smile while they’re drowning. I hate that every building out here looks like it was made to distract you from what’s falling apart. I hate that people come here to feel alive and the ones who live here are just trying to get through the week.”

Jesus let that sit. Then He said, “And yet there are people here the Father loves deeply.”

She turned toward the window. “I know that is supposed to help.”

“It is not supposed to be a slogan,” He said. “It is the beginning of how truth returns.”

That annoyed her because she was tired of truths that sounded nice and changed nothing. Still, she could not shake the sense that He was not talking in general. He was talking about her. The bus turned onto Flamingo. The hotels in the distance shimmered under the growing light like a made-up world balanced on the back of a harder one. She thought about all the rooms she cleaned, all the towels folded into perfect shapes, all the mirrors wiped until no fingerprints remained. She spent so much of her life making surfaces look untouched. Maybe that was why the inside of her life had become so hard to face.

At Sunrise Hospital and Medical Center, the waiting room was already full. A television mounted in the corner carried morning news nobody was really watching. A toddler cried with the sharp relentless sound of total need. An older man argued quietly with the check-in clerk about insurance. A woman in purple scrubs leaned against the wall with both eyes closed for ten seconds at a time like she was stealing rest in drops. Lidia found her father in a chair near the back, hat in his lap, chin down, pretending he had not been waiting long. Raul Moreno was sixty-eight and still broad in the shoulders, though time had taken more from him than he admitted. Some mornings he was clear. Some mornings he forgot the word for toaster and got angry at the cabinet instead. He had shaved around his mouth but missed half his neck.

“You’re late,” he said when she walked up.

“I know.”

“I could have taken the bus.”

“You know you couldn’t.”

Raul grunted because he knew it too. Then he noticed Jesus standing a little behind her. “Who’s this?”

“A friend,” Jesus said before Lidia could answer.

Raul looked Him over. “I don’t remember seeing you before.”

“I have seen you,” Jesus said.

Raul snorted softly and looked away. “Well, good for you.”

Lidia almost apologized for him, then stopped. Jesus did not seem bothered. He pulled a chair closer and sat like He had every right to be there. Lidia went to the desk to sign paperwork. The woman handling the forms had a neat badge that said Tanisha, but her face looked like she had already lived three days before eight in the morning. She kept her voice polite, but there was a strain underneath it, like every small problem might become the one that broke through. When the printer jammed and the man behind Lidia started sighing loud enough for everybody to hear, Tanisha pressed her lips together so hard they went white.

Jesus rose and walked over to the counter.

Tanisha looked up with the same guarded irritation service workers wear when they expect the next person to add weight instead of ease. “Sir, I’ll be right with you.”

“You have been holding yourself together since before sunrise,” Jesus said.

She froze. The printer kept whirring uselessly. “Excuse me?”

“You have not eaten. Your son had a fever in the night. You left him with your cousin because you could not miss another shift. You are worried the landlord means it this time.”

Tanisha stared at Him as if the floor under her had shifted by an inch. Lidia looked over from the forms and saw the woman’s whole face change. Not because she was exposed in some humiliating way. Because for one second she was seen with frightening precision.

Tanisha swallowed. “How would you know that?”

Jesus rested one hand lightly on the edge of the counter. “Because your life matters to My Father even when everyone around you is asking for something.”

The man behind Lidia stopped sighing. The toddler in the corner still cried. The television kept playing. Nothing dramatic happened. Tanisha just stood there with tears suddenly crowding her eyes and no room left to pretend she was made of stronger stuff than flesh. She blinked fast and looked down.

“I can’t do this all the time,” she whispered, so low Lidia almost missed it.

“No,” Jesus said. “You cannot.”

It was such a simple answer that Tanisha gave a broken laugh. Not a fixed laugh. Just a human one. Jesus reached past the printer, opened the panel the machine had been catching on, eased the paper free, and closed it again. It started running like it should have from the beginning. He did not make anything of that either. He stepped back. Tanisha handed Lidia the forms with shaking hands and whispered, “Room 214 after labs.”

Lidia led her father down the hall in silence. She hated how quickly she could be moved by small things now. A few years earlier she might have watched that scene and shrugged it off. Stress does that to people, she would have said. Everybody’s got problems. But lately it felt like the whole city was one thin crack away from coming apart, and any act of gentleness looked almost holy because there was so little of it.

Raul’s appointment took longer than expected. The doctor talked about memory changes and medication adjustments and the need for supervision, using careful phrases that sounded designed not to provoke shame. Raul heard only what men like him always hear when strength starts to leave. He heard loss. He heard dependence. He heard the long insult of becoming the thing other people had to manage. By the time they left the exam room he was hard and silent. At the pharmacy window he snapped at Lidia for asking whether he had eaten. When she reminded him that he had already taken the wrong pills once this week, he muttered that maybe she should just lock him in a room and get it over with.

Jesus had stayed nearby the entire time. Not intruding. Not drifting. Present in a way that gave everybody around Him more room to be human instead of less. Outside the pharmacy, Raul lowered himself onto a bench and rubbed his face with both hands. He looked suddenly older. Jesus sat beside him.

“When a man cannot do what he once did,” Jesus said, “he starts to think he has become smaller.”

Raul kept his eyes on the floor. “That’s how the world works.”

“No,” Jesus said. “That is how fear talks when it wants to own the room.”

Raul let out a dry breath. “Easy for you to say.”

“It is not easy for Me to say anything that is true to a man who has spent his life surviving by being useful.”

That landed. Raul looked over at Him. There was stubbornness still in the old man, but something else too. Weariness. Relief, maybe, that someone had named the wound under the anger.

“She thinks I don’t know what’s happening,” Raul said quietly, glancing toward Lidia where she stood at the pharmacy window. “She hides things badly. Same as her mother did. Brianna too. Everybody in that apartment thinks silence is kindness.”

Jesus nodded once. “And what do you think it is?”

Raul stared ahead. “A slow death.”

Lidia did not hear that part, but she saw the look on her father’s face when she turned back, and it unsettled her because it was open in a way she had not seen in months. He did not say more on the drive out. He did not have to. The whole morning felt like something tightly packed had begun to loosen.

They left the hospital close to noon. Heat was starting to rise off the pavement. Lidia stood near the curb with the medication bag in one hand and her phone in the other, staring at Brianna’s message thread. The last thing she had sent before dawn was Where are you. The last thing Brianna had sent back was Don’t do that. Don’t act worried now because you got caught. Lidia had read it a dozen times and still did not know how to answer.

Jesus stood beside her. “Say the true thing.”

“She won’t believe me.”

“Say it anyway.”

Lidia looked at the message field and felt sick. She wanted to write something careful, something that sounded like a mother still in charge. She wanted to say We need to talk when you calm down or Come home and let’s sort this out or You do not understand what I’ve been carrying. Every sentence she started tasted like the old life. She erased them all.

Then she typed, I used your college money to keep us in the apartment and to help Grandpa and I was ashamed to tell you. I have been pretending I could fix it before you saw it. I am sorry for lying to you. If you are at Boulevard Mall, I will come there.

She stared at the words for three full breaths before hitting send.

There was no answer right away. Of course there wasn’t. Truth does not come with instant rewards. Still, the second the message left her phone she felt something shift inside her, painful and clean at the same time. The kind of pain that means something dead is being cut loose.

“I was going to go to a title loan place after this,” she said suddenly.

Jesus turned to her.

“I wasn’t going to tell anybody. I was just going to do it and buy another month and keep acting like the floor wasn’t dropping out.” She laughed once without humor. “I don’t even know why I’m telling you that.”

“Because you are tired.”

“Yes.”

He looked down the road where cars kept streaming by, each one carrying a life, a burden, a hidden sentence. “Tired people are tempted by anything that delays truth.”

Her phone buzzed.

Brianna’s reply was short. Food court. One hour. Don’t bring speeches.

Lidia read it twice. Her hands started shaking again. She hated that even now, with a sliver of grace opening, fear rushed in to fill the space. She was afraid Brianna would look at her with the same disgust as before. She was afraid the girl would speak aloud all the things Lidia had been trying not to hear. She was afraid Jesus would stand there and watch her fail as a mother in real time.

“Come,” Jesus said.

They took the bus south on Maryland Parkway. Raul had insisted he could ride home with a neighbor from church who was already at the hospital, and for once Lidia had not argued. The medication bag rested in her lap. Jesus sat across from her this time. People got on and off in waves. A woman with salon tools. A man with two cases of bottled water. A middle-school boy pretending not to cry after a phone call he clearly did not want the bus hearing. Las Vegas passed in fragments outside the window. Fast-food signs. payday lenders. apartment walls baked pale by sun. Palms trying to look effortless. The old bones of the Boulevard Mall came into view with its faded edges and stubborn life, standing there like one more person in the city who had seen better years and kept showing up anyway.

Lidia and Jesus stepped into the cool dim of the mall just after one. The food court was half-full with teenagers, older couples, mall workers on break, and people who looked like they came there because nowhere else asked questions if you bought something small and stayed out of the way. Brianna was easy to spot. She sat at a corner table near the railing, black hoodie sleeves pulled over her hands, a lemonade sweating beside her untouched. Her hair was tied back high and messy. She had her mother’s mouth and her father’s eyes, which was one of the crueler things life had done because the father had been gone long enough that even resemblance felt like theft now. Tessa sat with her, scrolling on her phone until she saw Lidia approaching. She looked at Brianna, then at Jesus, then quietly stood.

“I’m going to Pretzelmaker,” Tessa said. “Text if you need me.”

Brianna nodded without looking up.

Lidia stopped at the table and suddenly forgot every sentence she had rehearsed on the bus. Jesus pulled out a chair and sat a little back from them, close enough to be there and far enough not to crowd. Brianna noticed that and frowned.

“Who is that?” she asked.

“A friend,” Lidia said.

Brianna gave a sharp humorless laugh. “Since when do you have time for friends?”

Lidia could have defended herself. She could have said plenty about shifts and bills and sacrifice. Instead she sat down and kept her hands in her lap so she would not start fussing with napkins or her phone or anything else people touch when they are trying to avoid the center of a thing.

“I lied to you,” she said.

Brianna looked up. She had expected managing. She had expected explanation. The bluntness of the sentence made her go still.

“I kept saying I had it handled because I wanted to believe that myself,” Lidia went on. “I kept thinking one more week, one more shift, one more fix, and you would not have to see how bad it got. But that was not protecting you. It was making you live inside confusion.”

Brianna stared at her and blinked hard once. “Do you know how crazy that makes a person feel? When you know something is wrong and the person who’s supposed to tell the truth keeps acting like you’re overreacting?”

“Yes.”

“No,” Brianna said, leaning forward now, voice low and fierce. “You do not. I come home and the lights almost get shut off and Grandpa is standing in the hallway at two in the morning asking where Grandma went and you tell me everything’s okay if we just stick together. Then I find out the money you told me not to worry about is gone and you still try to talk like you’re in control. I’m tired of being talked to like I’m a child when I’m the one who can tell what’s real.”

Lidia felt the words hit where they should. Jesus said nothing. He did not rescue her from them.

“I know,” Lidia said. “You’re right.”

Brianna’s face changed at that. Anger can prepare itself for resistance. It does not always know what to do with surrender.

For a moment nobody spoke. The mall hummed around them with ordinary noise. A blender roared from a smoothie stand. Somewhere below, a gate rattled open. Tessa laughed at something in the distance and then caught herself. Lidia could feel the whole conversation balancing on something fragile. She did not want to force it. She did not want to waste it either.

“I was ashamed,” she said. “That is the truth under all of it. I kept spending what I should not have spent because the need was right in front of me and the future felt far away. Then I got scared. Then I lied. Then I lied in smaller ways to hold up the first lie. I am sorry.”

Brianna looked past her mother toward Jesus. “Is he going to start preaching now?”

Jesus met her eyes. “Would that help?”

Something in the way He said it almost pulled a smile from her, but it vanished before it formed. “No.”

“Then I will not.”

Brianna leaned back and crossed her arms again, though there was less force in it. She was quiet long enough that Lidia thought maybe the moment had already gone as far as it could. Then the girl spoke without looking at either of them.

“I don’t just want the truth because of the money,” she said. “I want the truth because I feel like this place turns everybody fake. Everybody’s selling something. Everybody’s acting like they’re winning even when they’re desperate. Even at home it feels like that. Like we’re not a family. We’re a cover story.”

Jesus answered before Lidia could. “And you are tired of being raised inside a performance.”

Brianna looked at Him hard, defensive and curious at the same time. “Yes.”

He nodded once. “You were made for more than that.”

The girl’s throat moved as she swallowed. Lidia knew that face. It was the one Brianna made when she was trying not to cry because once she started she was afraid she would not stop. Lidia almost reached for her hand, then did not. Too fast and it would feel like grabbing at a wound instead of honoring it.

“What more?” Brianna asked quietly.

Jesus looked around the food court for a second as if the whole city itself was part of the answer. “A home where fear does not get to do all the talking. A life where truth is allowed in before everything is polished. Love that does not need constant pretending to survive.”

Brianna dropped her eyes to the table. Lidia saw her own daughter’s hands, still hidden halfway in her sleeves like she had not yet decided whether she belonged in the world. It broke something open in her. She had been so busy carrying weight that she had missed what the weight was doing to the girl right in front of her.

“I don’t know how to fix it,” Lidia whispered.

Jesus looked at her with that same steady clarity from the morning. “You do not begin by fixing. You begin by ceasing to hide.”

Brianna let out a long breath and finally looked at her mother again. The anger was still there. So was hurt. But now something else had entered too. Not trust. Not yet. Maybe the first edge of willingness.

“I’m not just mad about the money,” Brianna said. “I’m mad because you don’t let me help. You keep acting like if I know how bad things are then somehow I stop being your daughter and turn into one more problem.”

Lidia opened her mouth and then shut it because the girl had said exactly what was true. She had done that. Not out of cruelty. Out of panic. Out of a twisted idea that motherhood meant absorbing every blow alone until there was nothing left of you but function.

“I thought I was protecting you,” she said.

“You were protecting your image of yourself.”

The sentence sat between them like a hard object on the table. Lidia almost recoiled from it. Then she did the only thing left to do.

“Yes,” she said.

Brianna’s jaw tightened, but the fight had gone out of the posture that held it. Not because the pain was gone. It was still there, deep and hot and very much alive. But truth has a way of changing the air in a room even before it changes the room itself. It does not solve everything in a minute. It does not erase what was done. Still, once it enters, people stop wasting so much strength on pretending. Lidia felt that immediately. The dread was still in her body. The overdue bills were still real. Her father was still declining. The money was still gone. But for the first time in a long while she was sitting inside reality instead of running from it, and even though reality hurt, it also had one mercy falsehood never gives. It could finally be faced.

Tessa came back with a paper cup of lemonade and two pretzels she clearly had not wanted to interrupt the moment with. She slowed when she saw their faces and looked at Brianna, asking without asking whether she should stay. Brianna nodded toward the empty chair and Tessa sat, careful and quiet in the way teenagers sometimes are when life suddenly gets older around them. Lidia noticed that this girl, whom she had mostly thought of as a background friend with chipped black nail polish and oversized sweatshirts, had probably been carrying more of Brianna’s private pain than Lidia knew. That realization stung too. There were so many places shame had cost her. Not only money. Not only peace. It had cost her knowledge. It had made her absent in rooms where she was physically present.

“I’m not going home right this second,” Brianna said at last, keeping her eyes on the table. “I need a minute before I walk back in there.”

“That’s fair,” Lidia said.

Brianna looked up sharply, as if she expected a fight anyway. When it did not come, she exhaled and picked at the edge of the pretzel paper. “I’ll come later. I just needed you to stop talking to me like I was stupid.”

“I know.”

Tessa glanced between them. “For what it’s worth,” she said quietly, “she wasn’t acting stupid. She was acting mad because she knew something was off and nobody would say it.”

Lidia nodded. “I know that now too.”

Jesus sat with them in the ordinary noise of the food court while that truth settled in. He did not dominate the conversation. He did not make Himself the subject. He had a way of letting people become more honest simply because He was there, as if His nearness pulled them gently past the places where most people stop. Brianna finally reached for the lemonade. Tessa tore one pretzel in half and handed it over. Small things. Ridiculously small against bills and debt and grief and fear. Yet Lidia felt tears pushing at her eyes anyway because small things had begun to feel enormous. The sound of her daughter breathing without fury. The fact that the girl had not walked off again. The simple chance to sit at one table without anyone lying. She had forgotten how big those things were.

Her phone buzzed with a work text. Can you come in early? Call-offs again. She stared at the message and felt the old panic jump up immediately. Money. Hours. The never-ending grind of what is owed. For one second she almost stepped right back into her former self. She almost typed yes without thought. She almost turned this whole day into one more wound pressed flat beneath obligation. Jesus saw the shift in her face.

“You do not have to answer every demand by disappearing,” He said.

Lidia let the phone drop to the table. “If I keep missing shifts, I lose hours.”

“If you keep leaving your life every time fear knocks, you lose more.”

It was not an argument against work. She knew that. He was not speaking like somebody careless about bills. He was speaking to the deeper reflex in her, the one that had taught her that being needed was the same as being faithful. It was not. Sometimes being needed was just another way of being consumed.

Brianna looked at the phone. “You’re not going?”

Lidia rubbed her thumb across the cracked case. “Not early.”

The girl said nothing, but Lidia caught the flicker of surprise on her face. It was small. Still, it mattered. Children do not only remember the explosions. They remember the rearranging of priorities too. They remember when they lose to everything else. They remember when they do not.

They left the mall together an hour later, the four of them crossing the parking lot where heat was beginning to climb off the asphalt in waves. Cars glinted hard in the afternoon sun. A shopping cart rattled loose across a lane until somebody caught it. A man in a security shirt stood near one entrance watching nothing in particular and everything at once. Lidia had parked at Sunrise, so they walked toward the bus stop on Maryland Parkway. Tessa peeled off with a quick sideways hug to Brianna and a respectful nod to Lidia that held more grace than ceremony. Brianna said she would text later, but when the bus came she stepped on with them anyway. She did not explain the change. She did not have to. Some decisions are made by the body before the mouth catches up.

The bus lurched south and then east, carrying them through blocks of tired strip malls, chain stores, payday places, smoke shops, and apartment rows that had known more promises than repairs. Lidia looked out the window as they passed one title loan storefront with giant red letters shouting FAST CASH TODAY and felt her stomach turn. That had been her plan. Not in theory. Not someday. Today. She saw herself in her own mind walking in with the car title, coming out with relief that would have smelled like rescue for three days and ruin for three months. Jesus followed her gaze.

“Say it aloud,” He said.

Brianna turned. “Say what?”

Lidia kept looking out the window. “I was going to sign the car away for a loan.”

Brianna went still. Not angry this time. Just stunned all over again. “How bad is it?”

Lidia could have softened it. She could have done that old familiar thing where she answered the spirit of the question without answering the question. Instead she took a breath.

“Bad enough that I thought desperation was a plan.”

Brianna looked down at her hands. “Why didn’t you tell me?”

“Because I didn’t want to watch your face while I said it.”

That answer hit them both. Lidia hated how naked it was and loved that it was true. Brianna leaned her head against the window, eyes moving over the city but not really seeing it.

“I hate this,” she said.

“So do I.”

Jesus looked at both of them. “Hatred can name a wound, but it cannot heal one.”

Brianna let out a dry breath. “You always talk like that?”

“Only when words are needed.”

She almost smiled then, a real one this time, brief and unguarded before she caught herself. It disappeared quickly, but Lidia saw it and felt something warm and painful move through her chest. She had missed that face. Not because it had been gone forever. Because she had been too submerged to notice when it came and went.

Their apartment complex sat off East Twain, behind a row of businesses that looked sun-bleached even in spring. The stucco had once been painted a cheerful tan but had long since surrendered to the color of dust. Iron railings lined the second-floor walkways. One of the courtyard palms leaned like it had gotten tired of pretending it had enough water. Someone had left a child’s bicycle chained to a stair post with one flat tire hanging off the rim. Lidia had spent years hating that place and defending it in the same breath. It was cramped. It was aging badly. It was too hot in summer and too cold in winter. It was also the thing that had kept them under one roof when the city had become too expensive for breath. She had nearly lost it three times already and never said that aloud either.

When they reached the door to unit 208, Lidia stopped with her key in hand. Her pulse jumped. Going home felt harder than facing the hospital had. Hospitals have procedures. Malls have public noise. Buses keep moving. Home is where the silence sits and waits for you to tell the truth. Brianna stood beside her now, not close enough to touch, but no longer angled away like someone prepared to bolt. Jesus was just behind them, quiet, patient, letting the moment be what it was.

Lidia unlocked the door.

The apartment smelled faintly of rice, old coffee, and the lemon cleaner she used when she needed to feel like at least one thing was under control. Raul was asleep in his chair by the window with the television murmuring low and his glasses sliding down his nose. One hand rested on the arm of the chair. The other still held the TV remote like he had gone under in the middle of deciding something. The sight of him broke Lidia a little because she could see how much of her fear had been built around this man’s decline and how little she had let herself grieve it cleanly. She had not made space to grieve. She had only made space to function.

Brianna set her backpack down by the kitchen table. There were envelopes there, stacked under a fruit bowl as if hiding under ordinary life turned them into something less sharp. Jesus looked at the table and then at Lidia. He did not command. He simply saw. That was enough.

“Bring them out,” He said.

Lidia stood still for a second, then crossed the kitchen and pulled the bills free. Electric. Rent. Pharmacy. The minimum due on a credit card she had once sworn she would only use for emergencies, as though emergency were a weather pattern that ever really passed. Brianna came closer. She did not make a face. She did not accuse. She just looked. Raul woke in the chair and glanced over, confused at first by the quiet concentration in the room.

“What’s going on?” he asked.

Lidia turned toward him with the stack in her hand. It would have been so easy to say nothing. Easy to tell him it was paperwork from the hospital. Easy to move him toward dinner and medication and leave this conversation for another day. But another day was the old life. Another day was how rot kept spreading while everybody called it patience.

“We’re done hiding things,” she said.

Raul stared at her. Brianna looked from her grandfather to her mother and back. Jesus remained where He was, near the kitchen counter, not taking over the room but steadying it just by being there.

Lidia sat at the table and laid the envelopes down in front of them. “I used money I should not have used. We’re behind more than I said. I have been lying because I was ashamed and scared.”

Raul’s face closed at first, the way old men’s faces do when they feel blamed by the existence of trouble. Then it opened again when he realized no blame had actually been placed. Only truth.

“How behind?” he asked.

Lidia told him. All of it. The number in the account. The late fees. The payday loans. The money from Brianna’s savings. The title loan she almost took and did not. Each sentence left her feeling strangely weaker and stronger at once. She could hear how ugly it sounded. She could also hear the sound of no more performance. No more managing. No more half-story presented as a whole one. Brianna listened without interruption. Raul closed his eyes once as if bracing himself against shame of his own. When Lidia finished, the room went very still.

“I knew it was bad,” Raul said quietly after a while. “I did not know it was this bad.”

“I know.”

He rubbed a hand over his face and looked at the floor. “I should have asked more. I saw too much and said too little.”

Lidia almost objected. Habit. Reflex. The old way where everybody tried to protect everybody else by carrying separate pieces of the same pain in different rooms. Jesus spoke before she could.

“Silence feels merciful until it starts feeding what harms the house.”

Raul nodded without looking up. “That sounds right.”

Brianna pulled out a chair and sat down. For a long moment she just stared at the bills. Then she looked at her mother. “I’m not quitting school or anything stupid like that.”

The sentence came out harsh because she was seventeen and frightened and trying to sound older than both. Lidia shook her head quickly. “No. No, absolutely not.”

“I’m serious. Don’t do that thing where you start saying nobody asked me to help and then keep drowning. I live here too.”

The girl’s eyes were bright now and furious in a different way, no longer because she had been shut out, but because love was trying to find a practical shape. Lidia felt tears rise and did not fight them.

“I don’t want your life reduced because mine got hard,” she said.

Brianna leaned forward. “My life is already affected by it. That’s what I’ve been trying to tell you.”

Jesus watched them with a tenderness that made even bluntness feel safe. He was not the author of pain in the room. He was the reason it was finally being used for something besides concealment.

Raul cleared his throat. “There are tools in the hall closet and in the storage bin downstairs. Not worth a fortune, but some are still good. I haven’t touched them in months.”

Lidia looked at him. “Dad.”

“I’m not dead yet,” he said, a little sharp, then softened. “But I’m not crawling attics in July anymore either. If they can buy us time, they can go.”

Brianna looked at him with sudden wet-eyed affection she quickly tried to hide. “You don’t have to sound heroic about it.”

“I never sound heroic. I sound right.”

That almost made them laugh, and the almost mattered. It mattered because grief had not swallowed humor whole. It mattered because the house, for all its trouble, was no longer sealed shut.

Jesus stepped to the table and laid one hand on the stack of envelopes. “This is heavy,” He said. “But it is no longer hidden, and that changes what can happen next.”

Lidia looked at the bills, then at Him. “What can happen next?”

“Truth makes room for help. It also makes room for grief. You have needed both.”

The word grief sat in her chest like a stone finding water. Help she understood. Help was forms and hours and borrowed money and favors and rides and sacrifice. Grief was harder. Grief meant admitting that some losses were not going to be hustled back into place through effort. Grief meant she missed the version of her father who could drive anywhere in town without forgetting why. It meant she missed the years when Brianna still leaned into her without suspicion. It meant she missed who she herself had been before fear made her hard and secretive. She had been trying to outrun all that. No wonder she was tired.

The rest of the afternoon was not miraculous in the way stories sometimes lie about. Nobody knocked on the door with an envelope of cash. No forgotten account appeared. No landlord called to say never mind. Instead the long humble work of reality began. Lidia called the electric company and asked for a payment arrangement instead of hiding from the notice. She had to sit through hold music that made her want to cry from sheer fatigue, but when a woman finally came on the line and explained the options, Lidia listened like somebody being taught how to re-enter her own life. Brianna opened the fridge and started making a list of what they actually had instead of complaining there was nothing to eat. Rice, eggs, tortillas, half an onion, some wilting spinach, one container of yogurt no one wanted, and enough condiments to season an army if seasonings could count as dinner. Raul shuffled to the hall closet and began pointing from the doorway because standing there with purpose mattered to him more than sitting in the chair did. A drill. A voltage tester. Old wire strippers. A belt with pouches gone stiff from disuse. He named each item like he was introducing old coworkers.

Jesus moved among them without fanfare. At one point He was kneeling beside the storage bin on the balcony helping Raul sort what should be kept and what could go. At another point He stood by the stove while Brianna scrambled eggs and acted like she had not cooked enough times already to know exactly when to turn the heat down. Lidia caught herself watching Him again and again because there was no place in that apartment where He looked out of place. He did not become less Himself in ordinary rooms. If anything, the ordinary rooms revealed Him more.

Near five o’clock there was a knock at the door. Lidia’s whole body tensed. Jesus turned toward her, not telling her not to be afraid, just present in it. She opened the door to find Mrs. Calderon from across the walkway standing there in house slippers with a plastic container of beans in one hand and irritation written all over her face in that particular way some people carry kindness, like they refuse to make a sentimental thing of it.

“Raul said he had a doctor appointment,” she said. “Nobody told me if he was back, so I made too many beans on purpose.”

Lidia blinked at her. Mrs. Calderon had lived across from them for four years and had mastered the art of seeming nosy while saving people’s lives in practical doses. She had once sat with Brianna when Lidia got stuck on a late shift and could not get home in time. She had also scolded Raul for taking the trash out during a heat advisory. Lidia had accepted her help before, but never honestly. Always as if each favor were a temporary exception in a life otherwise under control.

“He’s back,” Lidia said. “And thank you.”

Mrs. Calderon peered past her into the apartment, taking in the boxes on the floor and the bills on the table with one sweep of experienced eyes. “Looks like a day.”

“It is.”

The older woman shifted the beans to her other hand. “I’m going to say something and you don’t have to like it. People on this walkway are not blind. We know when something’s off. You don’t get extra points for struggling quietly.”

Lidia let out a breath that was half laugh, half surrender. “I’m starting to understand that.”

“Good,” Mrs. Calderon said. Then she looked past Lidia toward Jesus, who was standing by the kitchen sink with a dish towel in His hand because at some point He had simply begun drying the plates Brianna washed and no one had thought it strange enough to stop Him. Mrs. Calderon narrowed her eyes a little. “I don’t know you.”

Jesus smiled. “You have known people like Me.”

She snorted softly. “That is not an answer.”

“It may be enough for today.”

For reasons Lidia could not have explained, Mrs. Calderon accepted that. She thrust the container into Lidia’s hands and muttered, “Tell Brianna not to burn the eggs.” Then she shuffled back across the walkway.

Brianna had heard that last part. “I can cook eggs.”

“Not when you’re angry,” Mrs. Calderon called without turning around.

The laugh that escaped Brianna then was real and helpless and sixteen kinds of human. It filled the apartment for a second and did more good than advice would have.

Later, when the sun had started its slow drop and the hard edge of the day softened just enough to let people feel what they had been carrying, Lidia sat at the table with the payment arrangement number written down, the stack of sorted bills smaller now, and her father’s tools boxed by the door. It was not enough. Not close. But it was movement. Honest movement. Brianna sat across from her with a legal pad from the hall drawer, writing down due dates and amounts in big block letters because the girl had always thought more clearly once things were visible. Raul had dozed again in the chair with less tension in his face than before. The eggs, tortillas, and beans had become dinner. Cheap dinner. Real dinner. A meal not made grand by abundance but by the lack of pretending around it.

Jesus sat near the open window where the evening breeze, such as Las Vegas allowed, pushed warm air through the screen with the smell of pavement and somebody grilling downstairs. The city outside was shifting into its second face. Day workers returning. Night workers leaving. Neon beginning to wake. Helicopters in the distance preparing to carry tourists over a glittering version of life few of them would ever actually touch. Lidia thought about the Strip again and felt something different this time. Not less disgust exactly. More clarity. The city was not only one thing. It was not just deception or hunger or noise. It was also people in apartments off East Twain eating beans from a neighbor because that was what love looked like today. It was girls in mall food courts asking for truth. It was tired women at hospital desks being seen before they collapsed. The lights were real. So was the hidden life beneath them. Jesus had walked straight into that hidden life all day and never once treated it like the lesser part of the city.

Brianna looked up from the legal pad. “Can I ask you something?”

Jesus nodded.

“Why does it feel like when people talk about God, they always talk like He’s over there somewhere, and then every now and then something happens and it feels like He’s right in the room and it’s almost worse because then you know how much you’ve been trying not to think about Him?”

Lidia turned at that. Raul opened one eye from the chair. Even half-asleep he knew a real question when he heard one.

Jesus answered gently. “Because distance feels safer than surrender.”

Brianna frowned. “That sounds bad.”

“It feels costly,” He said. “Not bad. You do not keep God far because you are uniquely terrible. You keep Him far because He is true enough to change what false things get to stay.”

She looked back down at the legal pad. “So what if somebody wants Him near and doesn’t want everything blown up?”

Jesus watched the evening light shift across the floor. “Then that person is like almost everyone.”

That answer quieted her rather than disappointing her. Lidia knew why. It did not shame the question. It made room for it. Brianna had spent years around religious language that often felt like it came from people who had no idea how hard actual surrender was when your life already felt unstable. Jesus never talked that way. He spoke like somebody who knew exactly how frightening truth could be and still called people toward it because it was the only road to anything solid.

The phone rang then, an unknown number. Lidia almost ignored it. Something in her made her answer anyway. It was the housekeeping supervisor from Bellagio. The tone in the woman’s voice told Lidia before the words did that the call was not about a shift. There had been cutbacks. Hours reduced. Schedules changing next week. Nothing personal. Just the usual clean language companies use when the blow lands on lives far smaller than the sentence delivering it. Lidia listened, thanked her because people trained themselves to be polite while being cut, and hung up.

For a second she could not breathe right. Brianna saw it at once. “What happened?”

Lidia stared at the phone in her hand. “My hours are getting reduced.”

The room dipped. Not literally. It just felt like the floor had shifted half an inch and left everything slightly wrong. That was the true cruelty of financial fear. Even after a day of honesty, tenderness, and progress, one sentence could still hit like a physical force. Lidia sat down hard. Her first thought was not holy. It was not brave. It was the old animal thought. We are not going to make it.

Brianna stood. “How much reduced?”

“I don’t know yet.”

Raul swore softly from the chair and then apologized to no one in particular. Lidia stared at the table and felt the dark wave come in. Here it was. The proof that honesty did not pay bills, that opening the envelopes had not changed the math, that the city could still grind right over whatever fragile hope had begun forming in this room.

Jesus crossed to the table and sat beside her. Not across. Beside. That small choice mattered more than speeches.

“Look at Me,” He said.

She did. Barely.

“This is not the end of what the Father is doing.”

She laughed once, bitter and exhausted. “It feels like a terrible time for Him to be subtle.”

Jesus did not flinch from the edge in her voice. “You think the Father’s work is proven only when fear loses the ability to speak. It is also proven when fear speaks and does not become your master again.”

Lidia pressed both hands to her eyes. “I don’t know how to do that.”

“No,” He said softly. “But you are learning how to stop worshiping urgency.”

That sentence opened something sharp in her because she had never used that word for it. Worship. She would have said stress. Responsibility. Survival. But urgency had been ruling her for a long time. It had decided what got hidden, what got spent, what got delayed, what got sacrificed, what counted as faithfulness, what voices got listened to. It had told her that the loudest need was always the truest one. It had turned her into a servant of panic and then named that service love. No wonder her life felt hollowed out.

Brianna sat back down slowly. “Okay,” she said, taking a breath like she was trying to grow into adulthood mid-sentence. “Then we work the actual problem. Mom, you need the exact schedule tomorrow. Grandpa, we sort what tools can sell and what’s worth keeping. I can pick up more babysitting hours with the McKinleys and maybe ask Mrs. Calderon if her sister still needs help cleaning on weekends. I’m not saying forever. I’m saying right now.”

Lidia looked at her daughter and saw not a child being robbed, but a young woman trying to stand inside truth without dramatics. It humbled her. It also hurt, because part of parenting is grieving the moments when your children have to become strong in places you wish they could have remained light.

“I’m sorry,” Lidia whispered.

Brianna looked straight at her. “I know. Just don’t leave me outside the truth again.”

“I won’t.”

Jesus watched them and nodded once, as if something essential had just been planted.

The evening moved on. Not easier. Truer. Brianna took the trash out and came back talking about how one of the downstairs kids had drawn with chalk all over the walkway rail. Raul insisted on showing Jesus an old photo album from a cabinet drawer, mostly because old men do not always know how to say thank you directly and will sometimes translate it into showing you who they used to be. There was one picture from years ago taken outside a job site near Charleston Boulevard, Raul standing in a hard hat with two men beside him and a smile so open it almost hurt to see. There was another of little Brianna at Sunset Park with pigtails and a plastic shovel, her knees muddy and her grin shameless. Lidia sat on the couch and watched them turn pages. Grief and love moved through her together until she could not tell them apart. Maybe that was always the way.

At some point the sun slipped low enough to paint the apartment wall in amber. Jesus stood and walked to the window. Outside, the city was beginning to sparkle in fragments. Not yet the full nighttime blaze. Just hints. Headlights. Signs. The first strong line of gold far off where the Strip insisted on its own mythology. Lidia came and stood beside Him.

“I used to think this city meant I had failed somehow,” she said quietly. “Like if I had made better choices, we would not be here, living like this, holding on like this.”

Jesus kept His eyes on the view outside. “Places do not shame people. Lies do. Pride does. Fear does. A city is full of souls the Father sees.”

Lidia leaned one shoulder against the window frame. “I have spent so much energy feeling humiliated by my own life.”

“I know.”

She closed her eyes. “And now?”

“Now you stop calling what is wounded worthless.”

The line went through her like light through a cracked blind. She had been doing that for years. To herself. To the apartment. To the whole tired shape of their life. As though struggle were proof of lesser value. As though exhaustion meant God had stepped back. As though hidden hurt made a person less worth staying close to. Jesus had moved through this entire day doing the opposite. He kept stepping closer to the parts people hid. Not recoiling. Not dramatizing. Not looking impressed by appearances. Just seeing.

After a while Brianna joined them at the window. She had changed into an old T-shirt and looked younger for it. Tired, but younger. She glanced toward the far-off lights and then down into the courtyard where Mrs. Calderon was slowly watering two plants that had no business surviving in that heat but somehow had.

“Do you think people can actually change?” Brianna asked.

Jesus answered without delay. “Yes.”

“Even after they’ve been lying for a long time?”

“Yes.”

“Even if they don’t change fast?”

“Yes.”

She slipped her arms over her chest and looked down. “That sounds nice. I’m just not trying to be dumb.”

He turned toward her. “Hope is not the same as gullibility.”

She considered that. “Then what is hope?”

“Hope is the refusal to hand the future over to what has been most painful so far.”

Brianna went quiet. Lidia felt the sentence settle into both of them. She knew she would remember it later, maybe on some ordinary Tuesday when the sink was full and the numbers still did not work and the city outside looked like a machine built to reward harder hearts than hers. She knew because some words do not sound large when spoken. They just lodge somewhere deep and keep working.

Night came proper not long after. Lidia made Raul take his medication while Brianna read the label because double-checking was now part of truth too. Mrs. Calderon knocked once more to ask if the doctor had changed anything and stayed eight minutes longer than she meant to because she wanted details and because care often hides inside inconvenience. The hallway filled now and then with footsteps and voices, the ordinary music of apartment life. Somebody downstairs argued in Spanish and then laughed. A baby cried in another unit and was soothed. A motorcycle revved out on Twain and then faded. This was not a quiet city, not really. But there are kinds of quiet that have nothing to do with silence. Lidia began to feel one of those settle inside the apartment.

When Raul finally went to bed, he paused in the doorway to his room and looked at Jesus with a seriousness that made him look suddenly more like the strong man in the old photo.

“I don’t know exactly who You are,” he said, “but I know what this day was before You showed up and what it is now.”

Jesus met his gaze. “Then you know enough for tonight.”

Raul nodded once and disappeared into the room.

Brianna stayed up a little longer at the kitchen table, pretending to scroll on her phone while really thinking. Lidia knew that look too. The girl had inherited not only her mouth but her tendency to turn inward when something mattered. Jesus sat nearby, not pressing her. After a while she looked up.

“If God sees people like this,” she said softly, gesturing around the apartment, “then why does it take so long for things to change?”

Lidia almost answered from old church reflex. Because God’s timing is perfect. Because trials build character. Because His ways are higher. None of those things were false exactly. They were just too polished for this room. Jesus answered in the way He always had all day, simple enough to live with.

“Because hearts are not machines,” He said. “And because love does deeper work than relief alone.”

Brianna stared at the table. “That sounds hard.”

“It is.”

“Then why do people act like faith is just saying nice things and then feeling better?”

“Because many people would rather use faith to avoid pain than let faith tell the truth inside it.”

Brianna nodded slowly. “Yeah. That sounds right.”

She rose after that and moved toward her room, then hesitated and came back. For one second Lidia thought she might hug her. She did not. Not yet. Instead she touched her mother’s shoulder once, quickly, almost awkwardly, and said, “Wake me up tomorrow. We’ll do the tool thing early.” Then she disappeared down the hall.

Lidia sat very still after that because the touch had said more than speeches would have. Not full restoration. Not instant trust. But a bridge where there had been distance. She looked at Jesus with tears finally rising again, quiet ones this time.

“Thank You,” she said.

He shook His head gently. “Thank the Father.”

“For what?”

“For not despising the small beginning you almost missed because you wanted a dramatic rescue.”

She laughed through the tears. “That sounds like me.”

“It sounds like many.”

They sat together in the dim kitchen light a while longer. The bills were still there. The trouble had not gone soft. Yet Lidia no longer felt trapped under the lie that everything good had to arrive in one big answer. Maybe that had been part of her damage too. She kept waiting for life to fix itself in a way that would let her feel clean again all at once. Jesus had not done that. He had done something slower and somehow more frightening. He had brought truth into the rooms she would rather have kept locked. He had let dignity return there. He had let tenderness live there. He had made ordinary faithfulness visible again. There was no glitter in it. No spectacle. Yet nothing about it felt small.

Close to ten, Jesus stood. “I am going.”

The words filled the apartment with immediate ache. Lidia had known the day would end. Still, she had not been preparing for that sentence. Brianna reappeared from the hallway as if she had somehow known. Raul, from his room, called out, “Who’s leaving?” and then came to the doorway in his T-shirt and socks when no one answered quickly enough.

“You can’t just walk out like this,” Lidia said before she could stop herself.

Jesus smiled at her, and there was so much kindness in it that it made the ache worse and better at the same time. “I did not walk in to become one more thing you try to hold onto out of fear.”

Brianna stood in the hall light with her arms folded, but not defensively now. More like she was holding herself steady. “Are we going to see You again?”

He looked at her for a long moment. “You will see what the Father is like everywhere you cease pretending He is absent.”

It was not a direct answer. It was a true one. Brianna knew it. Her face showed the tension of wanting something simpler and recognizing the value of what she had been given.

Raul stepped closer. “At least let me walk you to the stairs.”

Jesus inclined His head. “All right.”

They all went out into the warm night together. The courtyard lights cast that weak amber apartment complexes use, enough to keep people from tripping and not enough to flatter anything. Mrs. Calderon’s plants were still dripping from the evening watering. Far off, the Strip blazed brighter now, all spectacle and gold and the illusion that excess could heal what emptiness had broken. Up close, on that second-floor walkway off East Twain, none of that mattered much. What mattered was the family standing there with a man who had brought truth into their rooms and made it feel survivable.

At the stairwell Jesus turned to them. Lidia did not know what to say. Thank You was too small. Stay was too needy. I’m scared was true but incomplete. In the end she said the plainest thing.

“I don’t want to go back.”

He understood without explanation. Back to hiding. Back to frantic lies. Back to urgency as god. Back to the lonely management of appearances.

“Then do not,” He said.

“But I’m still me.”

“Yes,” He said. “And the Father knows how to keep meeting people there.”

Brianna’s eyes filled then. She blinked hard and looked away, furious at her own tears. Raul stood with his hands hanging loose at his sides, all argument gone from him. Lidia felt the night air on her face and suddenly remembered the morning at Sunset Park, the damp grass, the thin blue line of dawn, and the fact that the day had begun with Jesus kneeling before anyone had asked anything of Him. The whole day had been held inside that first prayer. She could feel that now.

Jesus went down the stairs without drama, crossed the courtyard, and stepped out toward the parking lot. He did not look back immediately. When He reached the far edge beneath the leaning palm, He paused and turned. The weak amber light caught His face just enough for them to see it. Calm. Present. Near. Nothing in Him hurried. Nothing in Him performed. Then He lifted one hand in a small gesture that felt less like goodbye and more like blessing, and walked out into the Las Vegas night.

Lidia stood there for a long time after He was gone. The city kept sounding like itself. Cars on Twain. Sirens farther off. Laughter from another unit. The far helicopter thrum carrying tourists over lit facades. Yet under all of it, another reality had become impossible to ignore. The hidden lives were not hidden from God. The exhausted were not invisible. The ashamed were not worthless. The frightened were not abandoned to fear unless they chose fear as lord. And homes like hers, homes off tired roads and under weak courtyard lights, were not lesser places where holiness rarely bothered to enter. Holiness had been here all day, sitting at the kitchen table, riding the bus, standing at the hospital counter, listening in the mall, drying dishes at the sink.

Brianna leaned lightly against her mother’s shoulder, not all the way, but enough. “We can do tomorrow,” she said.

Lidia put an arm around her. “Yes.”

Raul cleared his throat behind them. “Tomorrow starts with coffee.”

Brianna laughed softly. “Grandpa, tomorrow starts with you taking your pills right.”

“That too.”

They went back inside together. Lidia turned off the kitchen light last. Before she did, she looked once more at the table with the legal pad, the bills, the payment number, and the empty bean container from Mrs. Calderon. Nothing about it would have impressed the city. Still, to her it looked more like hope than the whole Strip did from a distance.

Much later, when the apartment had gone quiet for real and each room held the particular stillness of people finally sleeping after a day that asked everything of them, Jesus stood alone again. He was not near the towers where the neon throbbed and the casinos roared their constant invitation. He had walked away from the bright machinery of performance and out toward a quieter edge of the valley where the city loosened and the sky opened. The lights of Las Vegas still spread behind Him in gold and white and restless color, beautiful in the way wounded things can still be beautiful when they refuse to stop glowing. Ahead of Him the desert held its own older silence. He knelt there in the warm dark, just as He had knelt in the cool dark of morning, and He prayed.

He prayed for Lidia, that truth would keep feeling cleaner than hiding even on the days it hurt. He prayed for Brianna, that anger would not harden into contempt but become courage joined to mercy. He prayed for Raul, that dignity would survive decline and that memory would be held in gentler hands than fear. He prayed for Tanisha at the hospital desk and for the woman in work shoes at the bus stop and for the boy who had pretended not to cry and for Mrs. Calderon watering impossible plants and for all the people in apartments, break rooms, corridors, cars, kitchens, parking lots, and late-night shifts whose lives the city taught the world not to notice. He prayed for the souls under the lights and behind them, for the ones selling illusion and the ones exhausted by it, for the ones numbing pain and the ones quietly telling the truth for the first time in years. He prayed with the same steady tenderness He had carried all day, as if none of them were too buried, too ordinary, too ashamed, too late, or too far inside the wrong story to be brought home.

And when He rose from prayer, the city still shone in the distance. Not redeemed all at once. Not healed in spectacle. Just held, seen, and loved by the Father in every hidden place the lights could not erase.

Your friend, Douglas Vandergraph

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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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