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from
hex_m_hell
The “AI” industry would like everyone to believe that we are experiencing a second industrial revolution. Up until recently, this was far from true. LLMs provided a significantly better way to do natural language analysis and transformations than traditional natural language processing. They definitely changed one domain, but produced garbage in others. The hype didn't match the reality, and, in a lot of ways, still doesn't. But things are going to change, and we should soberly assess why and how.
There are patterns that are similar to the Industrial Revolution, specifically around undermining independent skilled labor and destroying or enclosing commons. I think there's also a similar likelihood of revolution, if not even more revolutionary potential. The global wave of revolutions connected to industrialization mostly lead to some variant of liberalism, with greater or lesser degrees of compromise to prevent socialist revolution. The old order also developed an extremely authoritarian and system of crushing revolution that was, to some degree, internationally coordinated.
At the intersection of technology and climate change, we've already seen early waves going back to the Arab Spring. This was probably the first wave of modern revolutions. Back then, revolution in the imperial core seemed impossible with the rapid destruction of Occupy. Today, many of the countries where autocracies were overthrown rapidly returned to some autocratic form of government. But not all of them.
It's important to remember that the monarchies of their day also tried using authoritarianism to stop the future. Learn about Metternich and the Holy Alliance. There was a concerted international effort to crush the wave of liberal revolution that had been topping monarchies since the 1770s. In case you weren't aware, it didn't work.
Some monarchies were able to hold on to power for a while by tightly controlling technological advancement. This did not turn out well for them. While Belgium, the Netherlands, and the UK monarchs survived through massive concessions, the Romanov plan to hold on to everything did not turn out quite so well for, uh, anyone. The proto-fascism of various European powers from the late 1700s through the early 1900s could not ultimately save any of them.
Fascism is not sustainable. It is the fire of a collapsing star, growing even as it frantically consumes itself, a phase that can only be a prelude to explosion. The best it can hope to do is silence civil discourse, gaining some time in exchange for completely loosing signal about when the collapse will come and by what means.
Of course, we all know that the liberal democracies that came out of the various Imperial collapses produced the more resilient aristocracy of capital. This aristocracy managed to untether itself from geographically local politics through “free trade,” where capital is free to roam the world while borders keep people in.
We see echoes of Metternich in regional governments supporting for the Junta of Myanmar against popular revolution. Even governments that otherwise (outwardly) disagree with the policies of the dictatorship, would still prefer a “stable trading partner” to a free people. In Syria, too, Turkey would prefer to annihilate Rojava while local powers look for ways to exploit the situation for their own interest. It's common to criticize people comparing Rojava to Anarchist Spain because they are such different situations. But there are parallels in how liberal democracies would prefer fascism to any alternative to liberalism.
There is, like Metternich believed, a natural order. That natural order is, of course, in the form of liberalism, not monarchy, but the underlying structural assumption remains the same even as the systems shift. Power is deeply uncreative.
It is with that lack of creativity that we should pivot back to the current moment. We keep being told that “GenAI” (the set of technologies based on large data sets and transformer models, of which LLMs are one such technology) will destroy art. They will not. Photography allowed anyone to perfectly represent an image. It changed painting, but it didn't destroy it.
Impressionism was a direct reaction to photography. Painters even emulated photographic elements, such as blur and depth of field, in ways that had not ever been imagined before. But the most important reaction was that painting focused more and more on emotion. A photograph with a skilled photographer can capture emotion, but it remains limited in ways that other visual arts are not. It is its own thing. Photography is a specific medium. People predicted that it would destroy painting. It didn't.
GenAI won't destroy visual art. They may change it. But there are feelings that can't be encoded in prompts because they can't be encoded in words. Visual art exists specifically because words categorically can't capture certain things.
But even art that is literally words, literary arts, are not something LLMs can do well. LLM text feels hollow because it is. Writing is, ultimately, a synesthetic activity (even for people without that specific neurodivergence). Words have sounds, they feel ways in your mouth, they're connected to other sensations. An LLM can say “kiki” and “bobo.” It can find statistical associations that make it almost seem as though it understands. But that's all it is, a statistical association. It's a stochastic representation of a hidden process. There's something underneath that, something that's ultimately indecipherable. That thing touches the nature of the universe.
You can't represent it statistically in one big model, because it's not even consistent. Language both discovers and creates those connections, which create and lead to the discovery of more. It's a tangled hierarchy. No LLM will ever be able to do that, because no LLM will have a body shaped by nature.
But not all writing is like this. Some technical writing is simply the dry regurgitation of facts. Bad technical writing anyway, and a lot of it is bad. LLMs can represent bad technical writing pretty well. They're trained on a lot of it. Where it's useful to have such things, LLMs can probably do that just fine.
And yet, a good technical writer is actually not far off from a good creative writer. They will tap in to emotions and images to make concepts obvious. They will be playful to make reading enjoyable (instead the expected horrible slog). LLMs will not do this. LLMs can construct metaphors that are optimized for LLMs, but they can't really optimize for humans because they can't experience the world in a human body. They don't have eyes, ears, or feelings connected to millions of years of evolution.
Even things we are told that LLMs are good at, like text summarization, relies on hidden context. Summarization is necessarily lossy. What you is chosen to keep vs lose depends on the purpose of the summarization. It also depends on the frame within which you're operating. A text can only be summarized well if the summarizer has a model of the reader that includes information about things that they already know (which can be safely dropped), things that they don't know or that may conflict with their existing beliefs (which are essential to highlight).
Today GenAI images and videos have become the ascetics of modern fascism. Fascists use GenAI because no one would actually put in the time and effort to make the horrible images they want to exist. But even more than that, fascists hate art and artists. They hate it because can't control it and they don't understand it. They tell everyone that GenAI will destroy art, in the hopes that it will manifest.
GenAI will not destroy art. It can't. But perhaps in a generation or two, after this wave of fascists succumbs to entropy, GenAI might become another creative tool. In the meantime, I expect art to emphasize what can't be replaced: oil paintings having more texture, writing more focused on emotion, etc.
But there are things that GenAI may well replace. Protein folding is essentially a solved problem now, specifically because of GenAI. It had required humans. There was a huge project where humans would manually fold models of proteins. That created a massive data set, which can now solve for arbitrary proteins. Humans are, of course, still critical to pharmaceutical development, but one boring job is gone.
Web design is “solved.” A human is no longer needed to make something that's “close enough” to customer expectations. If the cost is low enough, then people will compromise. A lot of web design has always been the awful work of just making things look the same, or at least look good, on different platforms. That integration problem should absolutely go away. It's not creative, it's just technical noodling.
However, a good web designer doesn't just “make exactly what the customer wants.” A good web designer makes the right thing for the client. They know that the thing the customer wants will look awful, will not work, will convey things that are not culturally appropriate to their target audience. Anyone skilled in any service role is actually good because they can convince their customer that the thing they want is actually bad. An LLM will never do that.
But if LLMs are “good enough” to do the basic jobs, and they're cheap, then designers never get to learn. They never get to build the skills needed to help people not just implement their vision, but shift it to integrate the knowledge of a skilled artisan.
And that's the shift I expect to see.
I think we're moving into a factory model of technology, where software and digital artifacts can be produced in a way that “good enough” but the market is so flooded with cheap garbage that people can't afford to learn to make things better. The same economics that drive planned obsolescence will drive digital artifacts. This is most obvious in software right now, with people creating mountains of unmaintainable code that does some basic thing then breaks as soon as features start being added.
We already live in a world where technology is always broken. That will only get worse, if we let it.
Technical security has always been arcane and mostly invisible. For decades everything was vulnerable and most people weren't aware. Over time people started to become more and more aware, both as security people started getting better at explaining the risks to media (see FireSheep), and as more stuff got visibly hacked. At this point, nearly everyone has had their government records, financial records, or medical records leaked on the Internet at least once or twice. Passwords get leaked so often that Have I Been Pwned is a whole project, with 17 billion records. And yes. The answer is yes.
There are a bunch of IOT automatic tank gauges (ATG) exposed directly to the Internet. Apparently if you log in and tell them they're rotated a whole bunch of times, they catch fire. I say “log in” as though they all have passwords set, as though those passwords that do exist can't be easily guessed or even derived. That article talks about 900 of them. These have been known about for a long time, and the same article cited 6k during their previous scan.
Your hospital has been owned. MRIs don't get updated because each update has to go through the FDA. Those machines get plugged in to the Internet, they're running some outdated version of Windows, and they get hacked. Hospital security lets them get hacked because, they hope, the hackers will patch to keep other people out and the legit admins can't patch.
That's where we were before all of this LLM stuff. What we have today makes that look like Fort Knox.
People are vibe coding MCP servers using LLMs trained on decades of insecure trash. Then they tell you to install their tools remotely, so there's code you don't control running on your system. Great, it's a chance for a supply chain attack every time you restart the service. But worse still, there's natural language malware. We can finally have an autonomously polymorphic worm. At some point that's gonna intersect with Spiralism, and we'll get a memetic worm that crosses the boundary between humans and machines and back. We already have tons of AI propaganda (which, was always predictable).
With malicious skills and agent files, malicious MCP servers, and people building systems with basically no isolation, it's just a catastrafuck. It's so deeply hopeless that half of the MCP github pages are just like “YOLO, just pipe curl directly into bash disabling all security checks, lol!” LLMs have essentially infinite attack surface since it's all of natural language connected directly to some code exec or another. But what's the proposed solution? Just put an LLM in the middle to review all the LLM generated stuff. Nothing could go wrong. Oh, right, the “AI security” agent is just an LLM, which means it's also more attack surface.
None of this is actually impossible to fix. Humans have been the weakest link in security for a long time. We understand how to design systems that assume compromise. We just aren't doing that because “move fast!!” Fixing these problems requires actual focused engineering from a human. You can't vibe this shit.
Unfortunately, it's not profitable to slow down. We already see that if everyone is always getting owned, then there's no incentive to distinguish yourself as a company with security. Clearly, no one cares. There's obviously no demand. Why waste the money? Just check the boxes and pay the fines. They're cheaper than the security spend anyway. Welcome to the yolo economics of late stage capitalism.
But we can only be forced to accept this state of things if we don't have any alternative. Which is, of course, why “AI” is trashing open source right now. I'm not saying it's intentional or that it's a conspiracy. It's not. But there is a systemic incentive to destroy those commons, to drain them. There have been very intentional efforts in the past, specifically by Microsoft, to “embrace, extend, extinguish” open source projects. LLMs provide an opportunity to hypercharge that.
Basically every company relies on open source at some level, and for most it's almost their whole stack. Most of them don't give back. Everyone freaks out when a tiny bit of investment into security reveals a bunch of kernel bugs. Yeah, “many eyes make bugs shallow” only works if people are actually putting eyes on it. Commons have to be maintained. People have to put resource in, not just take them out. And now we're seeing the extractive collapse of our critical digital commons.
Well, I say people need to put resources in, but it actually matters what goes in. If you take water from a lake and dump sewage in, it's not exactly “managing the commons.” But yeah, that raw sewage into our metaphorical lake is also happening at the same time. I don't know what the digital equivalent of cholera is, but get ready for it.
So there we have it: enclosure/destruction of the commons, attacks on skilled labor, centralization of power, growing authoritarianism. They keep saying it's like the industrial revolution, and, yeah, there are definitely some parallels. Those aren't the only ones, I assure you.
What do we do about it? Yeah, I don't fucking know. I'm just throwing this out here because no single one of us is going to figure it out alone. We're only going to create a better world if we know what we're up against, and we choose to build it together.
from bios
Reactionary Reviews | Notes From The Underground
Notes is documentary in it’s truest form. It is a document that aligns to the ethos of what it is documenting. An act of reverence. Refraining from any examination or critique of that it is historicizing. It is here that it both fails and succeeds.
Following the recollections of Cape Town Hip Hop legends, Ready D, Rozzano X, Issac Mutant, Kim Possible and others, interspersed with the viewpoints of younger hip hop adherents, Lyrix, Driemanskap, and Dope St Jude, the film primarily focuses on the role of hip hop in the late struggle, the history of the Cape Flats from District 6, the beginnings of Cape hip hop, with a loose discussion on the provenance of afrikaans, and the Cape hip hop rhythms, none of this in great depth, but all of it with gravitas.
Staying true to the viewpoints of it’s subjects is one of Notes strengths. It is less a journey into the realities of Cape Hip Hop but the depth of feelings about it, a nostalgia for a time when it felt possible to change the world.
The films strongest moments are when it holds back and let’s it’s subjects speak. Ready D talking about the gummy rhythms of the first POC track, the occasional reference to Mr Devious, the moments where an old hip hop head spits in that old hip hop head rhythm, the honesty of these moments, the non-critical approach, and visual reverence for it’s subjects, the resistance to making poverty porn of the places the story takes place in, these are Notes’s triumphs.
But in visually evoking the nostalgia evident from the subjects, at times the environments seem too pretty, the light too gorgeous, it avoids any critique of contemporary living conditions of such revered elders.
There is an ache for more in-depth examination, at times it feels that the film gives only lip service to trans-culture, intersectionality and more contemporary concerns. In the starkness of it’s portrayal, in the weight of it’s representations, it does slyer, perhaps unconscious work, and simply portrays women in hip hop only in relation to men. And perhaps this was a wise decision as a history not a document of now, but without that critique it does rather feel that the filmmakers might not know Dostevsky at all.
To be lost in the significance of what was, to see how much of now is rooted in that, brings a dignity to the history, even as it allows us to wonder why the subjects live as they do, why the form has not changed radically in the decades since it emerged, without ever making a meal out of it.
Rich with excellent archive photographs and video, layered with contemporary footage of the landscape of the Cape Flats – a sequence of b-boying in different settings is close to transcendental. And in the final analysis, it is an automatic pass to any film that features the monumental sound clip from POC’s Die Stem… “Excellent, finally a black president.”
This is history spoken by the people who were that history and as such it is a beautiful thing that this history allows them their victories.
Encounters Screenings 6-14th June
from An Open Letter
I had my therapy session again today, and it helped me recognize how a lot of the things that I wish I had Come from social media. It’s not actually real stuff, similar to how if I look at photos I take after social events I host or things like that it must seem like I have this massive wonderful friend group. Almost to prove my point, K messaged me after seeing my story saying that she wishes that she had friends like that. I think that’s like another sign of divine intervention here, essentially showing my lesson is true, because what she saw was the life that I wished that I had. And do you see the irony there? And so I kind of recognized that the lies that look wonderful are similar to mine.
from eivindtraedal
Vi har allerede hatt full stopp i utbygginga av fornybar energi i mange år. Nå sørger Rødt for flertall med høyresida for å bråbremse havvindsatsingen også. Samtidig sørger “Norgespris” for at nordmenn dropper å installere solceller og sparer strøm, og vi struper utvekslingen med strøm med utlandet. Vi er landet som har blitt for dumt.
Partiene på høyresida er svært ivrige på å bygge ut atomkraft, som vil bli langt dyrere enn havvind, og ikke er realistisk på minst 15 år. I mellomtiden skal vi altså stoppe havvind-prosjekter som allerede er i gang. Det er oppskrift på et fattigere og gråere Norge, som faller enda mer akterut i den globale utviklingen.
Når Stortinget vil bruke titalls milliarder på å subsidiere strømsløsing og bruk av bensin og diesel skjer det uten utredning, og milliardene får rulle uten kostnadskontroll. Heisann, Norgespris ble dobbelt så dyrt som vi trodde? Ingen grunn til å trekke i nødbremsen! At solcellebransjen ligger med brukket rygg er en liten pris å betale. Hva skal vi vel med nye næringer? Olja tar vel aldri slutt?
Rødt er glade i å skryte av den rene norske kraftkrevende industrien, basert på vannkraft. Men hvis denne industrien ikke fantes, og utenlandske kapitalister hadde foreslått å etablere smelteverk basert på vannkraft i vakre vestlandsfjorder i dag, ville Rødt garantert vært mot. Man kan ikke bygge ren industri hvis man er opptatt av å gå fremst i hvert demonstrasjonstog. Rødt fremstår hverken som et klimaparti eller et industriparti. Her er det viktigst å please Motvind, ikke industri og fagbevegelse.
Hver gang oljenæringa mumler om “forutsigbarhet” kaster Stortingsflertallet alt de har i hendene, og gir oljebransjen MER enn de ber om. Oljeskattepakka er det grelleste eksempelet. I ettertid innrømte Erna Solberg at Stortinget hadde mistet hodet. Nå mister Høyre hodet igjen, og sørger for nøyaktig det motsatte av forutsigbarhet for norsk industri. For en farse.
from Edshouldbeinbed
It is still Monday in parts of Canada as I post this. And it sure as shoot is still Monday in Japan.
There are some artists that translate Japanese music from Anime and Video Games and just... rock it solid. So here are some favourites.
Mashle OP Season 2: Bling-Bang-Bang-Born (English Cover) Will Stetson also has a great cover of the Dandadan OP, but Mashle. This cover is just so perfectly executed, and inspired this whole playlist.
Kamen Rider 01: REALxEYEZ (FULL ENGLISH COVER) Have I mentioned I love Toku today? Zero One started off the Reiwa era with a banger theme, and Mark de Groot and Mr. Goatee just nail it.
Spice and Wolf – “Tabi no Tochuu” (FULL Opening) Amanda Lee, alias LeeandLie, alias AmaLee, alias Monarch, alias the Scuff Queen. I should have known you'd be here. Fits your MO, too. Take an awesome anime theme, translate it, and sing it over awesome orchestration. You're lucky I have other perps to deal with, scram. What? No, no I just got some sniff finger print dust in my eye...
One Punch Man Season One OPENING: The Hero – Jam Project Jonathan Young... did know Jam is a group, right? He didn't have to do it alone. I wonder what it took to prepare... I'm guessing here, but... 100 HOURS OF SHREDDING! 100 HOURS OF DRUM WORK! And, a brisk run up and down his ENTIRE VOCAL SCALE!
My Hero Academia: The Day FULL OPENING (OP 1) Nathan Smith, Nathan Sharp, NateWantsToBattle. This is here because Nate's cover made me actually give a bloody damn about anything My Hero related. I don't hate it, mind. It just never grabbed me. This cover does.
NARUTO SHIPPUDEN OPENING 4: CLOSER This is my favourite Naruto OP. It's also our first example of “translated by the original artist” as Joe Inoue did the original and this English version.
Fairy Tail, OP Season 1: Snow Fairy This song is literally the extent of my Fairy Tail fandom. To make this list, the cover had to make me do what the original did. Inexplicably tear up. And, well, Studio Yuraki gets the award.
Cowboy Bebop ED: Real Folk Blues Most covers either just do the TV size or otherwise abridge this. Caroline Gordan / Caroline Makes Music commits to the whole thing, and by sauce she nails it.
By Caroline Makes Music
Nero's Battle Theme (Devil May Cry): Devil Trigger I had to get Mr. “Can I stop playing Metrovania now” RichaadEB in here, and while his Bad Apple cover is great... this turns any voice call into karaoke. Lollia and LittleVMills on vocals, all these voices inside of my head...
Kamen Rider Build: Be The One (English Ver.) This isn't the only Kamen Rider song sung in English and Japanese by the same person. But it is scientifically the best one. I have already performed the experiment. Beverly nails the track again with Pandora's backing.
SPY x FAMILY OP 1: Mixed Nuts Hey, I didn't know the Scuff Queen's tech support guy could sing! What's next, a duet with John VTuber or Rin Penrose? Why are there angry VTubing fans at my door?
The Galaxy Express 999 (English Version) Welcome to the “We can do our own damn song in English!” club, Godiego. This is, of course, the END theme to the classic anime Fate/Stay— wait, an Iron Mouse fan from our previous entry has gently vetoed this gag... Hat tip to Rycochet for reminding me Godiego did this quite a few times.
Lower One's Eyes (English Cover) So, I wanted another Will Stetson song here. This is essentially a dub of the AMV of the original song, which was pitched to me as (checks notes) Judas betraying Jesus but it's tragic yuri with a witch and maid. Let me put on my best ProZD impression, ahem. Okay.
Plastic Love It should not have taken a nice member of the Beige Party, Jessica, to remind me that Caitlin Myers covered Mariya Takeuchi's awesome city pop track Plastic Lover— especially since this is the song where (as one commentator notes) I keep expecting the singing to start a bar and a half earlier!
Mimukauwa Nice Try (English) The anthem of all those who are totally going to win at Uno— DAMN IT THAT'S THE THIRD WILD DRAW FOUR FROGGIESINGER!
Sanctuary (Opening) Jessica put this to mind too. I have never played Kingdom Hearts because I fear it will consume me. But Utada's vocal work for it in Japanese and English... it is a siren song...
Overlord III – “Voracity” (Opening) Amalee gets another feature, and gad this is note perfect, down to the “two three fours”. A true ode to the glorious, all consuming sublime existence of Nazarick.
from sugarrush-77
For the first time in my life I stopped going to church. After about a month of not attending, a couple things I remember.
The last day I went, a girl in my cell group was engaged, nearing marriage, and she was almost in tears as she described the feeling she had, that “she really felt in her heart that God wanted her to be happy,” as she described the newfound good things that happened to her. Maybe she meant that she had simply found joy in God alone, but from the context of describing all the ups of life coming her way, I lightly interpreted it as “Good things are happening – God must want me to be happy.” But after mulling over it for a couple weeks, I disagree with that sentiment. God makes you happy despite the circumstances. Actually, he may give you miserable circumstances, and He will still command you to joy. I say this from the perspective of someone that is chronically unhappy. I was afraid to say this before because I was afraid people would not believe God because of me or turn away from Christianity, but I am chronically unhappy. I don’t know if I’ve ever been happy in my entire life. In the few moments I have felt genuinely content, I’ve felt a deep sense of fear, longing, like something was off and everything would implode the next hour.
During my last cell group, I described how two months ago, I just gave up on the whole thing I was doing with faith, everything, because I couldn’t do it anymore. I was just miserable, and faith was making me more miserable. They looked concerned and offered me kind words, and said I should take some time off if I was struggling. I’m certain they actually cared. I was grateful for that.
New things:
My mind feels much more receptive to the vast possibilities of the world and life. My relationship with theology, the Church, was that there was a right answer, and that I was bound under tight moral quandraries. There were places my mind was allowed to go, and places where it was not. Things I wanted to say but did not let myself, now I speak freely. I feel the chains falling away. Maybe this is what other people just normally feel like all the time? It’s rather nice. I feel more human. I feel less trapped. I’m letting myself be a little delusional, chase ambition, the rather inconsequential things of this life that other people chase, and whatnot. Things I was already chasing before, now I chase more eagerly, openly, and guilt-free.
I realize how much of a time and energy sink going to church on Sundays was. Now I feel like I can actually relax on the weekend.
I’m trying more to do things I wouldn’t do because “a good Christian wouldn’t.” In some ways, I kind of hope I hit some kind of rock bottom. Maybe I just need to hit it hard enough to bounce back.
How did I come to associate the whole thing of Christianity with only the negative, so much that I detest even the idea of talking with other Christians, and going to church at all? Was there really so little happiness in that entire ordeal that I remember nothing positive and only the negative? To me right now, it seems even the positive was always tinged with the negative, the underlying feeling that I was not enough. Guilt. Punishment. Wanting to kill myself. Self-denial. Forcing myself to do things I did not want to. Emotional repression. Common themes.
from Douglas Vandergraph

Chapter One
Before the village stirred, before the first woman lifted a water jar from the cool shadow beside her door, before the ovens breathed smoke into the pale morning, Jesus went alone to a quiet place above Nazareth and prayed. He was nine years old, small enough that the hem of His tunic still brushed the dust when He knelt, yet there was nothing restless in Him. The stones around Him held the night’s last cold. The hills waited under a thin wash of dawn. Anyone searching for the Jesus of Nazareth age 9 story might imagine wonders first, but that morning began with silence, with a child’s folded hands, and with His face lifted toward the Father no one else could see.
Below Him, the village lay close and uneven, its walls the color of earth and weather, its roofs low beneath the widening sky. A rooster called from somewhere near the olive press, then another answered, and still Jesus remained where He was. His lips moved softly, not as a performance, not as a child repeating words to please adults, but as one who already belonged completely to the One He addressed. In that stillness, the whole day seemed to rest before Him like a bowl of water that had not yet been disturbed. It was the sort of hidden beginning that belonged beside the related article about young Jesus and quiet mercy, because mercy often entered the world before anyone knew they needed it.
When He rose, He did not hurry. He brushed the dust from His knees, looked once toward the eastern light, and began walking down the slope toward the waking houses. Nazareth was already filling with ordinary sounds by then: the scrape of wood, the sleepy murmur of children, the sharp call of a mother trying to move a slow son toward his chores, the low voices of men speaking about work before the heat came. Jesus knew those sounds. He knew the kindness in some of them and the fear hidden beneath others. On that morning, one sound was missing, and He noticed it before anyone said a word.
In a narrow house near the lower path, a boy named Noam sat beside a folded sleeping mat and tied the same knot three times without finishing it. His mother had already called him once. His younger sister, Hadassah, had stepped over his feet with a basket too large for her arms and told him to move, but Noam did not answer. He was eleven, old enough to be expected to help like a man and young enough to still wake in the night wanting his father’s voice. Since his father had been taken by fever before the barley harvest, people had spoken of Noam as if grief had made him noble. They said he was quiet. They said he was serious. They said his mother could depend on him now.
Noam hated those words.
He hated them because they sounded like praise, and praise felt like a door closing. If everyone believed he was strong, then no one asked why he could not sleep. If everyone believed he was dependable, then no one noticed how often his hands shook before he carried water, or how he watched the road as though his father might still come home with dust on his sandals and a tired smile on his face. And if everyone believed he was quiet because he had become wise through sorrow, then no one needed to know the truth: Noam was quiet because the last thing he had said to his father was not love.
His mother called again from the front of the house. “Noam, the jar.”
“I heard,” he said, though he had not moved.
Hadassah paused near the doorway and looked back at him. She was seven, thin-faced, with hair that never stayed tied. “Mother needs it now.”
“I said I heard.”
Her mouth tightened, and for a moment she looked older than she was. Since their father died, everyone in the house had been trying to become older at the same time. Their mother rose before dawn and worked until her shoulders bent. Hadassah stopped asking questions because questions made their mother cry. Noam carried things, mended things, watched doors, and answered with as few words as possible. They had all made agreements with pain without ever speaking them aloud.
Hadassah shifted the basket against her hip. “You are angry again.”
Noam pulled the knot hard until the cord cut into his finger. “Go.”
She stood there another breath, hurt showing plainly in her eyes, then left. Noam looked at the small red mark on his skin and pressed it with his thumb until it stung. He preferred that kind of pain. It had a place. It had a reason. It did not move around inside him looking for somewhere to hide.
Outside, his mother, Dalia, was speaking with a neighbor. Her voice sounded careful, the way it sounded when she was trying not to reveal need. Noam knew that tone too well. Need had become another person living with them, one who sat at every meal and followed them into every conversation. His father’s tools still leaned against the wall, but fewer people came now. A man without breath could not repair a plow. A dead man’s reputation softened hunger but did not fill a jar with oil.
Noam finally rose, took the water jar, and stepped into the lane. Morning light had reached the upper walls but not the narrow ground between houses. Women moved toward the spring. Men passed with ropes, baskets, bits of wood, and small talk. Noam kept his eyes low. He had learned that people were kinder when they thought he did not want to speak. They touched his shoulder, said his father had been a good man, said the Lord saw widows and fatherless children. Noam nodded because nodding ended things faster.
Near the turn in the lane, he saw Jesus coming down from the hill.
Noam slowed before he meant to. Everyone in Nazareth knew Jesus, though no one knew what to do with knowing Him. He was Mary’s son, Joseph’s boy, obedient and gentle, often carrying wood shavings in His hair or flour dust on His sleeve like any other child from a working home. He laughed with other children. He helped His mother. He listened when elders spoke. Yet there were times when He looked at a person and the person felt, without being accused, that a door inside had opened.
Noam did not like that feeling.
Jesus turned into the lane and greeted an old woman carrying kindling. He took part of the bundle from her without asking for thanks and walked beside her until she reached her door. Then He looked toward Noam. He did not wave like the other boys did. He did not call out. He simply looked, and Noam felt the knot inside his chest pull tight.
Noam lifted the jar higher against his shoulder and moved quickly toward the spring.
The path outside the clustered houses dipped between patches of scrub and stone. A few boys were already there, waiting while their mothers filled jars. One of them, a broad-shouldered boy named Matan, was tossing pebbles at a dry branch and pretending not to aim at a lizard beneath it. His cousin Asa laughed too loudly at everything Matan did. The two of them had been friends with Noam before his father died, but grief changes the shape of friendships. At first they had treated him carefully. Then they grew tired of carefulness. Now they spoke to him with the impatient ease of boys who did not understand what had been taken from him and secretly resented that loss had made him different.
Matan saw him and grinned. “Noam, son of silence.”
Asa laughed. “He speaks when the dead answer.”
The words passed through the air quickly, too quickly for the women to catch them clearly, but Noam heard each one. His grip tightened around the jar’s neck. He wanted to turn, to strike, to say something cruel enough that they would stop smiling. Instead he stared at the ground.
Matan picked up another pebble. “Maybe he is saving his words. Maybe he used them all before his father died.”
Noam’s face burned. He could see the morning his father left for the last time. He could see himself standing near the doorway, angry because his father had promised to take him to the ridge and then had been called to help repair a broken yoke. He could hear his own voice, sharp and childish, saying, “You never keep your word.” He could see his father turning back with sadness in his eyes, not anger, just sadness. By evening, fever had taken hold. Within days, his father no longer knew where he was.
Noam had said nothing after that. Not the apology. Not the love. Not the plea. Nothing.
Matan’s pebble struck the dry branch and snapped it. The lizard vanished under a stone.
“Leave it,” Noam said.
His voice came out low, but Matan heard. Boys always heard what could become a fight.
“Leave what?” Matan asked, stepping closer.
Noam looked up. “My father.”
For one heartbeat the path seemed to hold still. The women near the spring glanced over. Asa shifted, suddenly less amused, but Matan was too far into pride to step back without losing face.
“I only said you used your words,” Matan replied. “Maybe you should have saved some.”
Noam moved before he thought. He dropped the jar. It struck the ground and rolled, spilling the little water left inside. He shoved Matan with both hands. Matan stumbled, caught himself, and came back hard. They collided like goats, awkward and furious, each grabbing at the other’s tunic. Asa shouted. A woman cried for them to stop. Someone’s jar tipped. Mud formed beneath their feet where water ran into the dust.
Then Jesus was there.
He did not shout. He stepped between them with such calm that both boys stopped as if a stronger hand had seized the air itself. Matan’s fist remained half-lifted. Noam’s breath came fast. Jesus looked first at Matan, then at Noam, and there was no fear in Him, no excitement, no hunger to control the moment.
“Matan,” Jesus said quietly, “words can bruise what hands have not touched.”
Matan’s face changed. It was not repentance yet, but the beginning of being seen. He lowered his fist and looked away.
Then Jesus turned to Noam. His eyes did not soften into pity, which Noam would have hated. They held something deeper, something that made pity seem thin.
“Noam,” Jesus said, “your anger is carrying sorrow, but it cannot bury it.”
The words entered Noam like light entering a room he had kept shut. He wanted to reject them. He wanted to say Jesus did not know anything. He wanted to grab the jar and run home and never pass that way again. Instead he stood breathing hard while everyone looked at him, and shame rose so fiercely that his eyes filled.
A woman picked up his jar and handed it to him. It had cracked near the base. Not badly, but enough that water would not stay in it for long. Noam stared at the crack as if it had appeared in his own body.
“My mother will be angry,” he muttered.
Jesus looked at the jar, then toward the village. “Come.”
Noam stiffened. “Where?”
“To tell the truth.”
Noam almost laughed, but it would have broken into something else. “About the jar?”
Jesus did not move away from him. “About the jar first.”
The word first troubled him. He looked around. Matan stood with his shoulders tense, his pride wounded, his eyes lowered. Asa had gone silent. The women had resumed filling jars, but slowly, listening while pretending not to listen. Noam felt trapped by the open morning, by the crack in the clay, by the boy standing in front of him who seemed to know the thing he had hidden even from his own mother.
“I can mend it,” Noam said.
“Perhaps,” Jesus answered.
“I can say it slipped.”
Jesus said nothing.
Noam swallowed. The cracked jar hung from his hands. A thin line of water dripped from it into the dust, marking the silence between them.
At last he turned toward the village, not because he wanted to obey, but because something in Jesus made running feel smaller than staying. They walked together along the path. Noam expected Jesus to speak, but He did not. That silence was different from Noam’s silence. Noam’s silence pushed people away. Jesus’ silence made room for what was true to rise without being forced.
Near the first houses, Hadassah appeared in the lane, searching for him. When she saw the cracked jar, her mouth opened.
“Noam,” she whispered. “Mother needed that.”
“I know.”
“What happened?”
He looked at Jesus, hoping somehow the answer might be given for him. Jesus waited.
Noam’s throat tightened. “I fought Matan.”
Hadassah’s eyes grew frightened, not because boys fighting was rare, but because every broken thing in their house now felt like proof that they were closer to falling apart.
“Why?” she asked.
Noam looked down at the jar. The truth beneath the truth pressed against him, but he could not let it out. Not in the lane. Not with his sister’s face open before him. Not with Jesus standing near enough to hear his breathing.
“He spoke about Father,” Noam said.
Hadassah’s face changed, and for the first time that morning she looked less like a little girl trying to be older and more like a child who had also lost someone. “People always speak about Father.”
“Not like that.”
She nodded slowly, but sadness had already entered her expression. “Mother will cry.”
Noam hated her for saying it because it was probably true. He hated himself more because the cracked jar was only one more thing his mother would have to bear. He wanted to tell Hadassah to go away, but Jesus was watching him, and the words died before they reached his mouth.
Dalia stood in the doorway when they arrived. Her sleeves were rolled. Flour marked one cheek. She saw the jar, then Noam’s muddy tunic, then Jesus beside him. Her face did not become angry at once. That was worse. Anger would have given Noam something to push against. Weariness simply stood there, quiet and thin.
“Noam,” she said.
He held out the jar. “I broke it.”
“How?”
“I dropped it when I fought Matan.”
Dalia closed her eyes for a moment. Hadassah hovered behind him. Jesus stood a little to the side, not intruding, not withdrawing.
When Dalia opened her eyes, she looked older than she had that morning. “We needed that jar.”
“I know.”
“You know many things after they are broken.”
The words struck him harder than Matan had. Dalia seemed to regret them immediately, but she did not take them back. Perhaps she was too tired. Perhaps the truth in them frightened her.
Noam set the jar down carefully, though care no longer mattered. “I will fix it.”
“With what?” she asked.
He had no answer.
Dalia pressed her hand against her forehead. For a moment, the house behind her seemed to show itself fully: the swept floor, the low table, the worn tools, the absence of the man who had known how to mend what cracked. Noam felt the old memory rising again, his father turning back at the doorway, his own accusation hanging between them. His chest tightened until he could barely breathe.
Jesus stepped forward then, still gentle, still a child, yet carrying a steadiness that made the doorway feel like holy ground.
“May I sit with the jar?” He asked.
Dalia blinked, as if the question were not what she expected. “Sit with it?”
“Yes.”
She looked at Him for a long moment. Everyone in Nazareth knew Joseph’s household. Everyone knew Mary’s son was unlike other children, though people spoke carefully about what that meant. Dalia’s tiredness softened, not into relief, but into permission.
“Come in,” she said.
Jesus entered the house. Noam followed, uncertain and ashamed. Hadassah slipped in behind them. Dalia placed the cracked jar near the wall where the light from the doorway fell across it. Jesus sat on the floor beside it and rested His hands in His lap. He did not touch the crack. He did not pronounce a blessing. He did not make a wonder out of the family’s need.
He simply looked at the broken place.
Noam stood near the doorway, unable to understand why this frightened him more than anger would have. The jar was just clay. It had fallen. It had cracked. That was all. Yet in the quiet of the room, with Jesus sitting beside it, the crack seemed to accuse everything in him that had been breaking unseen.
Dalia lowered herself onto the bench. Her hands trembled once before she folded them.
“I am sorry,” Noam said, because it was the only safe truth.
His mother nodded. “I know.”
But Jesus looked up at him, and Noam understood with a sudden force that the safe truth was not the whole truth. The whole truth waited behind his teeth like a stone too large to swallow.
Outside, the village continued its morning. Men called to one another. A donkey complained in the lane. Somewhere nearby, a child laughed and was hushed. Inside the house, no one moved.
Jesus spoke softly. “A jar can be carried with a crack for a little while, but what it holds will keep leaking out.”
Noam stared at Him.
Dalia looked from Jesus to her son, and something in her face shifted. She did not know the whole of it, but she knew there was more. Mothers often know the shape of hidden sorrow before they know its name.
Noam wanted to run. He wanted to gather the cracked jar, throw it into the lane, shout that everyone wanted too much from him, and disappear into the hills until dusk. But Jesus did not block the doorway. He did not command him to stay. That was the hardest mercy of all. Noam was free to flee, and because he was free, the choice became his.
His hands closed into fists at his sides.
“I cannot say it,” he whispered.
Dalia rose halfway from the bench. “Say what?”
Noam shook his head. His face twisted as he fought the tears he had forbidden himself since the burial. “I cannot.”
Jesus stood then. He came near, close enough that Noam could see dust on His sandals from the hill where He had prayed.
“The Father hears what fear cannot finish,” Jesus said.
Noam looked at Him through blurred eyes. The words did not open him all at once. They did not make confession easy. They did not heal the house in a breath. But they made one small place inside him less alone, and that was enough to keep him from running.
Dalia took one step toward her son. “Noam.”
He turned his face away. “Not now.”
The refusal hurt her. He saw it happen. He saw Hadassah watching from the wall, her basket forgotten at her feet. He saw Jesus standing in the small room with the cracked jar between them all, and he knew, though he could not have explained how, that the day had not ended with a broken thing. It had begun with one.
Dalia wiped her cheek quickly, as if ashamed to be seen crying in front of children. “Then go help Joseph this morning,” she said, her voice thin but steady. “Ask if there is work. We need something for the jar.”
Noam nodded. Work was easier than truth. Work had weight and shape. Work did not ask him to open the room inside himself where his father’s last look still lived.
Jesus bent, lifted the cracked jar carefully, and set it nearer the wall where it would not be kicked. Then He turned toward the door.
Noam followed Him into the lane. The sun had climbed higher now, warming the stone. The village no longer felt like morning. It felt exposed.
For a while they walked without speaking. Noam expected Jesus to go toward Joseph’s workshop, but instead He paused where the lane divided. One path led toward the carpenter’s place. The other led back toward the spring, where Matan would likely still be helping his mother, pretending nothing had happened.
Noam saw the choice and felt anger return, quick and protective. “I said I would work.”
“Yes,” Jesus said.
“Then why stop?”
Jesus looked down the path toward the spring. “Because the jar was not the first thing broken this morning.”
Noam’s jaw tightened. “He spoke cruelly.”
“He did.”
“He should ask me.”
“Perhaps he should.”
Noam waited, but Jesus did not finish the thought for him. That was another thing Noam found difficult. Adults often filled silence with instructions. Jesus allowed silence to reveal what a person loved, feared, or protected.
Noam looked toward the spring. He imagined Matan’s face, stubborn and proud. He imagined himself apologizing first and hated the thought so much that heat rose behind his eyes again.
“I will not beg him,” Noam said.
Jesus’ voice remained quiet. “Truth is not begging.”
Noam looked away.
A man passed with a bundle of reeds and greeted Jesus warmly. Jesus answered with kindness, then waited until the man was gone. Noam wished for more interruptions. He wished for noise, for chores, for anything that would rescue him from the terrible gentleness of being asked to choose.
At last Jesus began walking toward Joseph’s workshop. Noam followed, relieved and ashamed at the same time.
The workshop stood near the edge of the village, open to the morning air, with wood stacked under a shade and tools arranged with Joseph’s careful order. Joseph was already at work, planing a length of wood while another man waited nearby with a yoke that needed repair. He looked up when Jesus entered, and his expression softened in a way Noam had noticed before. Joseph loved Jesus with a love that seemed both protective and reverent, as if he had been entrusted with something he could hold but never own.
“Noam,” Joseph said. “Peace to you.”
Noam lowered his eyes. “Peace.”
Jesus went to Joseph and spoke quietly. Noam could not hear every word, only enough to know that the cracked jar and the fight were being told without shame being added to them. Joseph listened, then looked at Noam, not with surprise, not even with disappointment, but with the kind of sober kindness that made Noam feel younger than he wanted to be.
“There is work,” Joseph said. “Not enough to buy a new jar today, but enough to begin.”
“I can do it,” Noam said quickly.
Joseph nodded toward a stack of small pieces that needed smoothing. “Begin there.”
Noam sat on the low stool and took the tool Joseph handed him. The wood felt good beneath his palm. Roughness made sense. Pressure had purpose here. If he moved carefully, something uneven became smoother. If he worked long enough, something useful could be shaped.
Jesus worked nearby, gathering curled shavings and sorting small pieces of wood. He did not watch Noam constantly. That helped. Noam could breathe when he was not being studied. Yet every so often, he felt Jesus near him, not pressing, simply present, and the truth he had refused at home continued to wait.
After a while, Joseph stepped outside with the repaired yoke. The other man followed him, speaking about payment and a stubborn ox. For a few moments, Jesus and Noam were alone in the workshop.
Noam kept scraping the wood.
“My father taught me this,” he said suddenly.
Jesus looked at him.
Noam’s hand slowed. “Not well. I was impatient.”
Jesus waited.
“He said impatience makes a man damage what he meant to mend.” Noam gave a small bitter breath. “He said many things like that.”
“You remember them.”
“I remember the wrong things.”
Jesus came closer and sat across from him on another low stool. The morning light touched His face, and there was nothing childish in His listening, though He was a child.
Noam swallowed. “I remember what I said when he left.”
The workshop seemed to grow still around them. Outside, Joseph’s voice continued somewhere beyond the doorway, low and calm. Inside, the curls of wood lay scattered like small pale ribbons on the floor.
Jesus said, “You have carried those words alone.”
Noam pressed the tool into the wood too hard, leaving a gouge. He stared at the mark, his breath shaking. “They were mine.”
“Yes.”
“He heard them.”
“Yes.”
“He died with them.”
Jesus did not answer quickly. When He did, His voice was steady and full of sorrow without despair. “Your father died loved by God. He did not die held by your last angry words.”
Noam’s grip loosened. The tool slipped from his hand and struck the floor. He covered his face, but the tears came through anyway. He cried without sound at first, then with the broken breath of someone who had spent too long guarding a door that could not stay closed forever.
Jesus did not touch him at once. He let him weep. Then, gently, He placed one hand on Noam’s shoulder.
Noam bent under it, not because it was heavy, but because it was kind.
Outside, the day went on. Bread baked. Water jars filled. Men argued over prices. Children chased one another through dust. No one passing the workshop would have known that inside, beside a wounded plank and a fallen tool, a boy had finally begun to stop believing that one cruel sentence was stronger than love.
Noam wiped his face with his sleeve and looked toward the doorway, ashamed of the tears but too tired to hide them completely.
“Do I have to tell my mother?” he asked.
Jesus looked at him with compassion that did not remove the cost. “Not because you are forced.”
Noam understood enough to be afraid. “But because it is true.”
Jesus nodded.
The wood in Noam’s lap was marked now, scarred by the gouge he had made when his hand shook. He ran his thumb over it and thought of the jar at home, leaking from its crack. He thought of his mother’s tired face. He thought of Hadassah saying people always spoke about Father. He thought of Matan at the spring and the words that had bruised what hands had not touched.
“I cannot do all of it today,” Noam said.
Jesus looked toward the bright doorway where the village waited with all its noise and need. “Then begin with what is given today.”
Noam nodded, though he did not know yet whether he had courage or only exhaustion. He picked up the tool from the floor and returned to the wood, moving slower this time. Jesus sat near him for another moment, then rose and began gathering the scattered shavings into a small pile.
The day had not become easier. The jar was still cracked. His mother was still tired. Matan had still spoken cruelly. His father was still gone. But something had shifted in the hidden place where Noam had kept his guilt like a private law. It had not disappeared. It had been seen. And being seen by Jesus made the darkness less able to pretend it was the truth.
By noon, Noam would have to go home. By evening, he might have to speak. Before that, he would have to pass the spring again.
For now, he worked in the quiet of Joseph’s shop while Jesus gathered what had fallen to the floor, and the morning that began in prayer continued moving, gently and firmly, toward the truth Noam could no longer keep buried.
Chapter Two
Joseph’s workshop held the heat of the day before the sun had fully climbed. The shade softened it, but the smell of cut wood and dust still seemed to gather around Noam as he worked. He kept his eyes on the small board in his lap and moved the smoothing tool carefully, trying not to deepen the gouge he had made. Every stroke asked something of him. Too much force left a scar. Too little did nothing. His father had known how to find the middle place, the pressure that changed wood without wounding it.
Noam’s hands did not know that place yet.
Jesus worked nearby, quiet and unhurried. He was sorting narrow strips of scrap wood into piles Joseph could use for kindling or small repairs. From time to time, He lifted a piece, turned it over, and set it aside as if nothing in the room was useless simply because it had fallen away from the larger work. Noam watched Him once and then looked down quickly, irritated by how much meaning seemed to gather around ordinary things when Jesus was near.
Joseph returned after a while and inspected Noam’s board without taking it from his hands. “You slowed down,” he said.
Noam braced himself for correction. “I marked it.”
“I saw.”
“I pressed too hard.”
“Yes.”
Joseph reached for another piece of wood and placed it beside Noam. “A mark does not make the whole piece worthless. Learn from where your hand lost patience.”
Noam’s throat tightened. He nodded, unable to answer. Men had always said his father’s name with respect, but Joseph had known him differently. They had traded tools, repaired beams together, laughed about stubborn wood and more stubborn customers. Noam wondered whether Joseph remembered the day his father came to borrow a wedge and found Noam sulking in the lane. He wondered whether every adult in Nazareth had seen more of him than he wanted to believe.
By the time the sun stood high, Joseph gave him a small measure of grain and two little coins. It was not enough for a new jar, but it was more than Noam expected. He held the coins in his palm and felt both grateful and ashamed. His mistake had turned into labor, and labor had turned into something useful, but the deeper thing remained untouched. The money could begin to answer the cracked jar. It could not answer the words he had spoken to his father.
Joseph tied the grain in a cloth and handed it to him. “Take this to your mother.”
Noam nodded. “Thank you.”
Joseph looked toward Jesus, then back to Noam. “A house does not heal because one thing is repaired. But one faithful thing matters.”
Noam held the cloth tighter. “Yes.”
Jesus stood, brushed shavings from His tunic, and walked with him out into the white noon light. The village had changed since morning. Women had drawn back into shaded rooms. The lanes were quieter. Somewhere bread cooled under a cloth. Somewhere a baby cried with the full confidence that someone would come. Noam moved slowly, not because of the heat, though the heat was real, but because the path home passed near the spring.
He could have chosen another way. It would have taken longer, but not much. He thought of it as soon as they reached the turn. His feet almost moved toward the upper lane before Jesus looked at him.
Noam stopped. “I have to bring this home.”
“Yes,” Jesus said.
“The spring is not home.”
“No.”
Noam looked down the path where the stones fell away toward the place of water. At that hour only a few people would be there. Perhaps Matan had gone. Perhaps the whole matter had already become old. Perhaps Jesus would not make him go.
Jesus did not make him go.
That was becoming the unbearable pattern. Jesus stood beside him as if the truth had already been placed in Noam’s own hands, and no one else could carry it for him.
Noam exhaled through his nose. “If I go, he will think I am afraid.”
Jesus looked at him. “Are you?”
Noam wanted to say no. Instead he shifted the grain cloth under his arm. “Yes.”
The answer surprised him. It seemed to surprise the air around him too, not because fear was strange, but because saying it made it smaller and larger at the same time. Smaller because it no longer hid. Larger because now he had to face what it meant.
Jesus began walking toward the spring. Noam followed.
They found Matan there with Asa and two younger boys. Matan was kneeling beside a water jar, rinsing mud from its side with quick, angry motions. His mother stood several paces away speaking with another woman, her face tight with embarrassment. The spilled water from the morning had dried, but a darker patch of earth remained where the fight had turned clean dust into muck.
Asa saw Noam first and nudged Matan. Matan looked up. His expression hardened, and Noam felt the old surge rise in him again, the desire to strike before being struck.
Jesus remained a little behind Noam.
Noam stepped forward. His mouth went dry. He had imagined saying something strong, something that would protect him from looking weak, but every prepared word scattered when Matan stood. The two boys faced each other in the heat, both bruised in pride, both wanting the other to bend first.
Noam forced himself to speak. “I should not have shoved you.”
Matan blinked. Asa’s mouth opened slightly.
Noam stared at Matan’s shoulder instead of his face. “I was angry. I dropped our jar. It cracked.”
Matan’s jaw moved as if he were chewing words he did not like. “You shoved me because you wanted to.”
“Yes,” Noam said.
The truth cost him more than he expected. He had hoped confession might make Matan softer. Instead it seemed to give the other boy ground to stand on.
Matan glanced at Asa, then back at Noam. “So you came to say you were wrong?”
Noam felt heat climb his neck. “I came to say I should not have shoved you.”
“That is being wrong.”
Noam’s hands closed around the grain cloth. The old Noam, the one everyone called quiet and serious, would have answered with silence that punished. The angrier Noam, the one from that morning, would have lunged again. This new moment asked for something he did not yet know how to give.
Jesus spoke from behind him, not loudly. “Noam has told the truth about his hands. There is more truth here.”
Matan’s eyes flicked toward Him. His face flushed. “I did not touch him.”
“No,” Jesus said. “You touched his sorrow with your words.”
The younger boys went still. Asa looked at the ground. Matan’s mother turned from her conversation, having heard enough to understand the direction of the moment. She came closer, her lips pressed together.
“Matan,” she said. “What did you say?”
“Nothing.”
Jesus did not move. Noam wished He would look away, but He did not. His gaze did not accuse, yet it left no room for hiding.
Matan kicked a small stone with his sandal. “I said he used all his words before his father died.”
His mother closed her eyes. “Matan.”
Noam expected satisfaction to rise in him when Matan was exposed. It did, but only for a moment. Then he saw Matan’s mother reach for her son’s arm, not harshly, but with grief that he had been cruel in public, and Noam felt an unexpected heaviness. It was not forgiveness. Not yet. It was simply the first recognition that being right did not feel as clean as he had imagined.
Matan pulled his arm away from his mother’s hand. “He acts like no one else has trouble.”
Noam looked up. “What?”
“You walk through the village like everyone owes you silence,” Matan said. His voice shook now, which made it sharper. “If we laugh, you hate us. If we speak, you hate us. If we do not speak, you hate us. Your father died, and now everyone must step around you like a cracked bowl.”
Noam took a step toward him, but Jesus moved beside him, not blocking him completely, only near enough to remind him that he had a choice.
Matan’s mother said his name again, but softer this time. She looked ashamed and worried. Noam suddenly understood that Matan had been carrying something too, though he did not know what. Maybe it was not grief like Noam’s. Maybe it was fear of being blamed, or anger at losing a friend, or the ordinary selfishness of a boy who wanted the world to remain simple. Whatever it was, it did not excuse him, but it made him less like an enemy and more like another person standing in the same hot dust.
Noam’s voice came out rough. “You do not know what I owe.”
Matan looked confused. “What does that mean?”
Noam could not answer. The real sentence had almost escaped. He felt Jesus beside him, waiting. He thought of his mother, of Hadassah, of the cracked jar, of his father’s last look. The truth pressed again, but this was not the place for it. Not in front of Asa. Not in front of boys who would carry his sorrow through the village before sunset.
“I have to go,” Noam said.
Matan’s mouth twisted. “Of course.”
Noam wanted to leave with dignity, but dignity was difficult when your face was hot and your hands were shaking. He turned away.
Then Matan’s mother spoke. “Dalia needs water, does she not?”
Noam stopped.
The woman looked toward the path to Noam’s house. “Your jar is cracked.”
Noam said nothing. Need had stepped into the open again. He hated need most when others saw it.
She turned to Matan. “Bring the spare jar.”
Matan stared at her. “Mother.”
“Bring it.”
“It is ours.”
“And this water is not ours alone,” she said.
Noam felt the shame sharpen. “We do not need—”
Jesus looked at him, and the rest of the sentence weakened. They did need. His mother needed. Hadassah needed. Pride did not fill cups.
Matan went to a shaded place near the wall and returned with a smaller jar, one with a chipped rim but a sound base. He held it out stiffly, as if generosity had been forced through his arms against his will.
Noam did not take it at first.
Matan’s mother spoke to him gently. “Your mother may use it until yours is mended or replaced.”
Noam swallowed. “Thank you.”
The words were thin but real. He reached for the jar. Matan did not let go immediately.
“I should not have said it,” Matan muttered.
Noam looked at him.
Matan’s eyes stayed on the jar between them. “About your father.”
Noam waited for more. No more came. Perhaps that was all Matan had strength to give. Perhaps it was all he understood. Noam wanted a larger apology, one that named every bruise. Instead he received a small one, awkward and unwilling but true enough to exist.
“I should not have shoved you,” Noam said again.
Matan released the jar.
Noam carried the smaller jar to the spring and filled it slowly. Water rose inside, clear and bright, and the sound of it made his throat tighten. It was only water. It was also the thing his house had lacked because anger had broken what responsibility was supposed to carry. He lifted the full jar carefully, feeling its weight settle against his body.
Jesus walked with him toward home.
For several steps, neither spoke. The borrowed jar was heavier than the cracked one had been, or perhaps Noam was simply more aware of what he carried. At the turn in the lane, he glanced back. Matan was still near the spring, his head bent while his mother spoke quietly to him. Asa stood apart, picking at the edge of his sleeve.
“I did what You wanted,” Noam said.
Jesus looked ahead. “Did you?”
Noam frowned. “I said I was wrong.”
“Yes.”
“And he said he was wrong.”
“Yes.”
Noam waited. Jesus said nothing more. Irritation stirred again, weaker than before but familiar. “Then why does it not feel finished?”
“Because peace is not only the end of fighting.”
Noam shifted the jar against his side. “Then what is it?”
Jesus’ answer came gently. “It is truth with mercy living in the same house.”
Noam looked toward his own house in the lower lane. Truth lived there like a stranger outside the door. Mercy, he was less sure of. His mother loved him. He knew that. But love did not always feel like mercy when people were tired. Sometimes love wore a strained face and counted the grain twice. Sometimes love said, “You know many things after they are broken,” and then stood in silence because it had no strength left to soften the wound.
When they reached the house, Hadassah ran from the doorway. “You brought water.”
“It is borrowed,” Noam said.
“From whom?”
Noam hesitated. “Matan’s mother.”
Hadassah looked surprised. “After the fight?”
“Yes.”
Dalia appeared behind her. She saw the jar, then the grain cloth, then Noam’s face. There was still weariness in her, but also the searching look of someone trying to understand what the day had been doing while she remained inside with flour, worry, and a broken vessel.
Noam set the water down carefully. “Joseph paid me a little. Not enough for a jar.”
Dalia took the grain cloth and held it in both hands. “This helps.”
“I will work again.”
“I know.”
Her words were gentle, but they did not free him. Noam looked at the floor. Hadassah touched the borrowed jar with cautious admiration, as if it might vanish if handled too quickly.
Dalia glanced toward Jesus. “Thank You for walking with him.”
Jesus inclined His head. “He walked where he needed to walk.”
Noam wished He had not said it that way. It made the small obedience sound visible.
His mother studied him. “Did something else happen?”
The room seemed to grow smaller. Noam could feel the confession waiting, the one not about the jar, not about Matan, not about his hands. He looked at Jesus, but Jesus did not rescue him from the question. He stood near the doorway with the patience of morning prayer still around Him.
Noam opened his mouth. Nothing came.
Dalia’s face softened with pain. “Noam, what are you carrying?”
The question undid him more than accusation would have. He looked at his mother, then at Hadassah, then at the cracked jar near the wall. The crack had dried white around the edge. It looked harmless now, but everyone knew it could not hold what it had once held.
“I was angry when Father left that day,” he said.
Dalia became very still.
Noam’s voice grew quieter. “He said he would take me to the ridge. Then he had to help with the yoke. I told him he never kept his word.”
Hadassah looked from him to their mother, not fully understanding but feeling the seriousness enter the room.
Dalia’s eyes filled, but she did not speak.
Noam forced the rest through. “He turned back. He looked at me. I did not say anything else before the fever.”
His chest hurt. The words were out now, but they did not bring relief. They lay in the room between them like something wounded.
Dalia covered her mouth with her hand.
Noam misunderstood the motion and stepped back. “I know.”
She shook her head, tears slipping down her face.
“I know I should have said I was sorry,” he said, the words rushing now because fear had taken hold. “I know I should have told him I loved him. I know he died after I said that. I know you needed me to be good, and I tried, but I cannot make it leave me. I cannot.”
Hadassah began to cry softly. Noam wished he had not spoken in front of her. He wished the truth had remained buried. He wished Jesus had never stopped beside the cracked jar.
Dalia moved toward him, but he backed away until his shoulders touched the wall.
“Do not,” he said.
His mother stopped as if he had struck her.
The silence that followed was worse than the confession. Noam saw the hurt in her face and hated himself with a fresh force. Even now, when she reached for him, he refused her. Even now, he made sorrow harder.
Jesus stepped into the room fully. “Noam.”
He looked at Him, breathing fast.
“Your mother’s tears are not proof that you destroyed her,” Jesus said. “They are proof that she loves what you have been hiding.”
Noam stared at Him, unable to move.
Dalia lowered herself slowly to the floor, not because custom required it, but because her legs seemed unable to hold her. She wept then, not loudly, but with a grief that had been disciplined too long. Hadassah went to her, and Dalia gathered the little girl close. Noam remained against the wall, outside the comfort he wanted and feared.
“I remember that morning,” Dalia said at last.
Noam closed his eyes.
“Your father came inside after you spoke to him,” she continued. “He stood there for a moment, and I thought he was angry. But he smiled. Not because the words did not hurt. They did. He loved you, so they hurt. But he said, ‘The boy wanted his father today. I cannot fault him for that.’”
Noam opened his eyes.
Dalia wiped her face. “He was going to speak with you when he returned.”
Noam shook his head slowly. “He did not return well.”
“No.”
“So he never knew.”
Dalia looked at him with a sorrow that did not lie. “He did not hear your apology with his ears.”
The words struck the same wall inside him that had held the guilt in place. His face crumpled. “Then it is still there.”
Jesus came near enough for Noam to feel His presence, though He did not touch him this time. “The Father is not too late for what death interrupted.”
Noam did not understand that fully. Perhaps no child could. Perhaps no grown man could either. But the words entered him with a strange steadiness, not erasing the loss, not pretending the missed apology did not matter, but refusing to let death be the final keeper of every unfinished word.
Dalia opened her arms.
Noam looked at them as if they were a dangerous crossing. Then Hadassah whispered his name, and something in him gave way. He went to his mother, and she pulled him close with one arm while holding Hadassah with the other. Noam wept against her shoulder. He was too old to cry that way, or thought he was, but Dalia held him as if he were younger, as if the years since his birth and the grief since his father’s death had folded together into one wounded child.
“I was angry too,” Dalia whispered into his hair.
Noam stilled.
“I was angry he left us,” she said. “Angry at fever. Angry at empty jars. Angry at myself for needing you so much. I did not say it because mothers are not supposed to say such things to their children.”
Noam pulled back enough to look at her.
She touched his face. “You were not the only one carrying words you were afraid of.”
The room changed then, not into happiness, but into something more honest. The broken jar remained by the wall. The borrowed jar stood near the doorway. The grain lay in its cloth. Hadassah’s cheeks were wet. Dalia’s face was tired and open. Noam felt exposed, but not abandoned.
Jesus stood quietly beside them, and for a moment Noam wondered whether this was what the inside of prayer felt like when it entered a house.
Then a shadow crossed the doorway.
Matan stood outside, holding a strip of leather and looking as though he wished he had not come. Asa was not with him. His mother was not with him. He seemed smaller alone.
Noam stiffened, embarrassed to be seen with tears on his face. Dalia released him gently, and Hadassah wiped her own cheeks with the back of her hand.
Matan looked at the floor. “My mother said the jar needs binding if it is to hold until you replace it.”
He held out the leather strip.
Noam did not move.
Matan swallowed. “She said I should bring it. I came.”
The moment was awkward and fragile. Noam could still feel the rawness of confession. He did not want Matan inside it. He did not want another witness to his weakness. But the borrowed jar near the door and the cracked one by the wall told the truth plainly enough. Their households had touched now. Pride could not make them separate again.
Dalia rose and took the leather. “Thank you, Matan.”
Matan nodded quickly, relieved to have given it to an adult. But Jesus looked at Noam.
Noam understood that the day had another step in it.
He wiped his face with his sleeve and walked to the cracked jar. “I do not know how to bind it.”
Matan shifted at the doorway. “I have seen my uncle do it.”
“Then show me.”
Matan glanced up, surprised.
Noam did not smile. He was not ready for friendship to return simply because apologies had been spoken and mothers had cried. But he moved the jar into the light, and after a moment, Matan entered the house.
The two boys knelt on opposite sides of the broken vessel. Jesus sat nearby, not taking the work from them. Dalia and Hadassah watched in silence while Matan wrapped the leather around the jar’s belly and showed Noam how to pull it tight without snapping it. Their fingers bumped once, and both boys drew back as if burned. Then they tried again.
The binding was ugly when finished. The crack still showed beneath it. No one would mistake the jar for whole. But when Noam poured a little water into it, only a slow drop gathered near the base before stopping.
Hadassah smiled for the first time that day. “It holds.”
Noam looked at the jar, then at Matan. “For now.”
Matan nodded. “For now.”
Jesus looked at the vessel with quiet approval, not as if the jar were the miracle, but as if the truth around it had made room for mercy to begin its work.
Noam knew the story was not finished. His father was still gone. His apology had still not reached him in the way Noam wanted. Matan’s words still hurt. His mother still bore more than she should. The jar still carried a crack beneath the leather. Yet the house had changed because what had been hidden had been named, and what had been named could no longer rule alone in darkness.
When Matan left, Noam walked with him to the doorway. Neither boy knew what to say.
At last Matan looked toward the lane. “I missed when you laughed.”
Noam felt the sentence land in him strangely. He had not expected that. He had thought Matan only resented him. Perhaps he had. But resentment was sometimes grief wearing a meaner face.
“I do not know how to laugh now,” Noam said.
Matan nodded, not mocking him. “Maybe later.”
Maybe later was not forgiveness. It was not restoration. It was not the old friendship brought back whole. But it was a small place on the road where both of them could stand without striking each other.
Matan went down the lane.
Noam remained at the doorway until he disappeared. Then he turned back into the house. Jesus was near the broken jar, His hand resting lightly on its rim.
Dalia was watching her son. “Will you eat?”
Noam nodded.
Hadassah reached for his hand, and this time he let her take it. Her fingers were small and warm and sticky with dried tears. He held them carefully, as if pressure mattered there too.
Jesus looked toward the open doorway where the afternoon light fell across the threshold. “I must go to My mother.”
Dalia bowed her head slightly. “Peace to Your house.”
“And to yours,” Jesus said.
Noam wanted to say something before He left, but gratitude felt too large and too small at the same time. Jesus paused beside him, knowing.
“Today you began,” He said.
Noam looked toward the cracked jar and the borrowed one, toward his mother and sister, toward the lane where Matan had gone. Beginning did not feel triumphant. It felt tender and frightening, like stepping onto a path where each stone might ask more of him.
“What comes after beginning?” he asked.
Jesus’ eyes held the quiet of the morning hill. “The next true step.”
Then He went out into the afternoon, leaving Noam in a house that was still poor, still grieving, still uncertain, but no longer sealed around the silence that had been breaking it from within.
Chapter Three
The meal that followed did not taste like peace, though Noam had expected it might. His mother tore bread into pieces and set them before him and Hadassah. The grain Joseph had given them would stretch farther than Dalia had first hoped, but the house still felt careful around every bite. Noam ate slowly. Hadassah watched him as if he might break again if she spoke too quickly. Dalia moved with the tender uncertainty of someone who had finally heard the truth and did not yet know how to live beside it.
The cracked jar stood near the doorway, bound with Matan’s strip of leather. It held a little water now. Not much. Enough for the evening. Enough to prove that something damaged could still serve for a while if handled honestly. Noam kept glancing at it, not because he trusted it, but because he understood it too well. The binding did not remove the crack. It only kept the vessel from losing everything at once.
After they ate, Dalia folded the cloth that had held the grain and smoothed it across her knee. “Your father had a patient hand,” she said.
Noam looked up quickly.
She did not look at him at first. Her eyes rested on the doorway where late light leaned across the floor. “When something cracked, he would not curse it. He would hold it and turn it and say the broken place had to be understood before it could be helped.”
Hadassah leaned against her mother’s side. “He fixed my cup.”
Dalia smiled faintly. “Three times.”
“It kept falling.”
“You kept leaving it where feet belonged.”
Hadassah almost smiled. The almost of it mattered. Noam saw it and felt something loosen in him for one breath, then tighten again.
Dalia looked at him then. “He was not angry with you that morning.”
Noam stared at the bread in his hand. He wanted to believe her, but belief felt dangerous. A person could say kind things about the dead because the living needed them. He did not think his mother would lie, but grief could soften memory until it became easier to carry. Noam feared an easy kindness that was not true.
“I hurt him,” he said.
“Yes,” Dalia answered.
The honesty startled him.
She placed the folded cloth beside her. “You did. Children can hurt fathers. Fathers can hurt children. Husbands and wives can wound one another with tired words. That is why mercy must live in a house, not only memory.”
Noam looked toward the cracked jar. “I do not know how.”
“Neither do I, not well.” Her voice trembled but did not break. “I am learning because I must.”
A shadow moved across the doorway, and Jesus appeared there with a small bundle under one arm. Hadassah sat up at once, and Dalia rose, wiping her hands on her tunic.
“Peace to this house,” Jesus said.
Dalia bowed her head. “Peace to You.”
Jesus entered when Dalia welcomed Him and set the bundle on the low table. Inside it were several thin wooden splints, a bit of cord, and a small amount of resin wrapped in a leaf.
“My father sent these,” Jesus said. “For the jar.”
Dalia’s eyes filled again, but this time she did not seem ashamed of it. “Joseph is kind.”
Jesus looked at the bound vessel. “He said the leather may hold for a little while, but water tests every weakness.”
Noam felt the sentence enter him the way many of Jesus’ sentences did, touching more than the object named. He wished ordinary repairs could remain ordinary repairs. He wished a jar could be only a jar.
Dalia lifted the resin carefully. “Will You thank him?”
“Yes.”
Hadassah moved closer to the table. “Can it be made whole?”
Jesus looked at the jar, then at the girl. “It can be mended.”
“That is not the same,” she said.
“No,” Jesus answered gently. “It is not the same.”
Noam expected Hadassah to be disappointed, but she only nodded as if the answer matched something she already felt. Their father could not be made living again. Their house could not become what it was before fever came. Noam could not unsay his last angry words. Some things could be mended without becoming the same, and the thought was both sad and strangely merciful.
Dalia picked up the cracked jar and set it on the table. “Noam, help Him.”
Noam came forward. Jesus unwound the leather strip, and the crack showed itself fully again, pale and uneven down the clay. Jesus showed Noam how to place the wooden splints against the jar, how to hold the pressure steady, how to use the cord without pulling so hard that the clay split farther. Noam’s hands fumbled at first. The cord slipped. Resin stuck to his fingers. Once he pulled too sharply, and Jesus covered his hand with His own.
“Slowly,” Jesus said.
Noam swallowed. “I am trying.”
“I know.”
The answer had no impatience in it. That made Noam slow down more than correction would have. He adjusted the splint, held it in place, and wrapped the cord again. This time the pressure settled rightly. Jesus let go.
Dalia watched her son’s hands. “Your father did that with you once.”
Noam did not look up. “With me?”
“You were small. You broke a little oil cup while trying to carry it outside. You thought he would be angry.”
“I do not remember.”
“He said your hands had wanted to help before they knew how.”
Noam’s fingers stilled on the cord.
Dalia’s voice softened. “He was often kinder to your mistakes than you are.”
When the jar was bound with wood and cord, Jesus rubbed the resin carefully along the crack. The smell filled the house, sharp and earthy. It would need time to set. The jar could not be used at once. Noam found that difficult. After confession, apology, work, and repair, he wanted at least one thing to become useful immediately.
Dalia seemed to read his face. “Some mending cannot be rushed.”
He almost answered sharply, but he stopped. The day had made him aware of the cost of words before they left the mouth. He pressed his lips together until the moment passed.
Jesus washed His fingers with a little water from the borrowed jar. Then He turned to Noam. “Joseph asked if you would return a tool.”
Noam stiffened. “Now?”
“If your mother permits.”
Dalia glanced toward the sun outside the doorway. It was lowering, but there was still light enough for an errand. “Where?”
“To Reuel’s field,” Jesus said. “Near the lower terraces.”
Dalia’s face changed slightly. Noam saw it and felt his stomach tighten. “What is wrong?”
“Nothing is wrong,” she said too quickly.
Jesus did not speak.
Noam looked from his mother to Jesus. “Who is Reuel?”
Dalia touched the edge of the table. “The man whose yoke your father went to mend that morning.”
The room seemed to tilt. Hadassah looked up at her mother, then at Noam. The repaired jar, the splints, the smell of resin, the light on the floor, everything held still around the name of the errand that had stolen the ridge from him and given him his last cruel sentence.
Noam shook his head. “Why would Joseph send me there?”
Jesus’ voice remained calm. “Because the tool belongs there.”
“That is not why.”
Dalia closed her eyes for a moment. “Noam.”
“No.” His voice rose. “You knew?”
“I knew where your father went.”
“You did not tell me.”
“You never asked.”
The answer was true, which made it worse. Noam had built an entire prison around that morning and had not asked where the road actually led. He had not wanted details. Details might have required him to see more than his own hurt.
Jesus lifted a small iron wedge from the bundle. “Reuel returned this to Joseph, but it is not Joseph’s. It belonged to your father.”
Noam stared at the tool. The iron was worn dark from use. One edge showed a nick he recognized suddenly, though he did not know how he remembered it. His father had used that wedge to split stubborn wood and loosen tight places. Noam had once been told not to touch it until his hands learned respect.
He stepped back. “I do not want it.”
Jesus held the wedge without pressing it toward him. “It is not asking to be wanted.”
“What does that mean?”
“It means some things are given because they are yours to face.”
Noam looked at his mother. Part of him wanted her to refuse the errand, to say the day had already asked too much of him. Dalia did not rescue him. Her face was full of concern, but beneath it was a trembling trust, as if she too understood that avoiding Reuel’s field would leave the morning of his father’s death untouched in the place where it had ruled him.
He reached out and took the wedge.
The iron was heavier than he expected.
The walk to the lower terraces led away from the clustered houses and into the rougher edge of the village, where small fields clung to the slopes and stones had been dragged into patient walls. Evening light lay across the land in long bands. The heat was easing, and the air held the dry scent of soil, olives, and animals. Jesus walked beside Noam without speaking. The wedge hung in Noam’s hand, bumping lightly against his leg with each step.
After a while, Noam said, “He chose the yoke instead of me.”
Jesus looked ahead. “Is that what you believe?”
“He promised me.”
“Yes.”
“Then he left.”
“Yes.”
The answers did not argue, and because they did not argue, Noam’s anger had nothing to strike. He looked toward the fields below. “Why do You speak like that?”
Jesus turned His face toward him. “Like what?”
“Like You will not let me hide, but You will not force me out either.”
Jesus was quiet long enough that Noam wondered if He would answer. At last He said, “Because truth entered by force is often feared. Truth received in the light can heal.”
Noam gripped the wedge. “I do not feel healed.”
“You are not finished.”
They found Reuel near a low stone wall, binding a support for a young vine. He was older than Noam’s father had been, with a gray beard and a limp that made his movements careful. A thin ox grazed nearby, its yoke resting against the wall. When Reuel saw Jesus, he smiled. When he saw Noam, the smile faltered into recognition.
“You are Avidan’s son,” he said.
Noam had not heard his father’s name spoken plainly in days. People often said your father, as if the name might hurt. Hearing it now made him stand straighter and smaller at once.
“Yes,” he answered.
Reuel wiped his hands on his tunic and came closer. “Your father saved my planting that morning.”
Noam’s grip tightened on the wedge.
Jesus stood aside, letting the moment belong to the living and the dead.
Reuel looked at the tool in Noam’s hand. “Ah. I wondered where that had gone after Joseph repaired the yoke again. Your father left it here the day he came to help me. Fever had already been moving through some houses, though we did not know it would take him.”
Noam held out the wedge. “Joseph said it belonged here.”
Reuel did not take it. “No. It belonged to your father. Joseph was right to send it back through you.”
Noam’s hand remained extended, the wedge lying across his palm.
Reuel studied his face. “You look troubled.”
Noam looked at the yoke leaning against the wall. “He was supposed to take me to the ridge.”
Reuel’s face softened. “That day?”
Noam nodded.
The older man drew in a long breath and looked toward the slope above the village. “He told me.”
Noam’s eyes lifted. “He told you?”
“Yes. While he worked. He said his son would be angry because a boy remembers a promised hill more than a neighbor’s broken yoke.”
Noam felt the words strike and open. “He said that?”
Reuel nodded. “He laughed when he said it, but not cruelly. He said he had been that sort of boy once.”
Noam stared at him.
“He worked quickly,” Reuel continued. “I told him the yoke could wait until morning, but he would not leave the ox useless. My field was already late. My sons were away. I had no other help. Your father said a promise to a son matters, but a hungry house matters too, and he hoped you would understand when you were older.”
Noam’s throat closed. The story he had carried had only two people in it: himself and his father, one angry, one wounded. Now the morning widened. There had been Reuel’s field, an ox that could not pull, a house that needed planting, Joseph’s tool, his father’s hurry, and a promise postponed because mercy had interrupted it. Noam had hated the interruption without knowing whom it had helped.
Reuel touched the yoke. “He spoke of taking you the next morning if the light was good.”
Noam shook his head slowly. “There was no next morning.”
“No,” Reuel said with sorrow. “There was not.”
The wedge grew heavy in Noam’s hand. He wanted to blame someone, but everyone in the story seemed tired, human, needy, or dead. There was no villain large enough to hold his anger. Fever had no face. Mercy had cost him a day on the ridge. His own words had wounded a father who had been trying to help another man survive.
“I told him he never kept his word,” Noam said.
Reuel closed his eyes briefly. When he opened them, he looked at Noam with a gentleness that did not pretend the words were small. “Then he knew you wanted him.”
Noam frowned through tears that had started before he could stop them. “That is not what I said.”
“It may not be what you said, but fathers sometimes hear the longing under the anger.” Reuel’s own voice thickened. “Not always. We are foolish men often enough. But Avidan loved you with listening in him.”
Noam looked toward Jesus.
Jesus stood in the evening light, His face calm and full of compassion. He did not add anything. He did not need to. The turning had already begun.
Reuel reached into a pouch at his waist and drew out a small piece of carved wood. “He began this while the resin set on the yoke. Said his hands needed something to do while he waited.”
Noam stared. The carving was rough, unfinished, small enough to fit inside the older man’s palm. It was not a bird, as Noam first thought, but the beginning of a little ram, its back shaped, its head only partly formed.
“He said it was for your sister,” Reuel said.
Noam took it with trembling fingers. Hadassah. His father had been thinking of her too. Not only of work, not only of neighbors, not only of duty. His mind had been full of the house he intended to return to.
“Why did you keep it?” Noam asked.
“I meant to bring it.” Reuel’s face lowered with shame. “Then your house filled with mourning, and I did not know how to enter it. After that, each day made me feel later and more foolish.”
Noam looked at the unfinished ram. Another unfinished thing. Another delayed kindness. Another proof that people could fail to complete what they meant in love.
Reuel nodded toward the wedge. “Keep that. It was his, and you are his son.”
Noam almost said he was not worthy of it. The sentence rose easily. Jesus looked at him then, and Noam remembered what He had said in the house: some things are given because they are yours to face.
Noam closed his fingers around the wedge. “I will keep it.”
The sky had deepened by the time Noam and Jesus turned back toward the village. The unfinished carving rested in Noam’s other hand. He walked more slowly now, not from dread but from the weight of everything he had learned. The path seemed different, though it was the same stones, the same slope, the same scrub catching the evening wind.
“He loved us,” Noam said.
Jesus walked beside him. “Yes.”
“I knew that.”
“Yes.”
“But I did not know it there.” Noam touched his chest with the carving. “Not where the words were.”
Jesus looked toward the first lamps beginning to glow in the village. “Now you have seen more of the day.”
Noam breathed in shakily. “Seeing more does not make it hurt less.”
“No,” Jesus said. “But it can keep the hurt from speaking falsely.”
They reached the turn where one path led home and the other climbed toward the ridge. The ridge was not far, but the light was thinning. From there, Noam knew, the land opened wide. He had imagined that view many times after his father died, first with bitterness, then with longing, then not at all because imagining it became too painful.
Jesus stopped.
Noam looked up the path. “It is getting late.”
“Yes.”
“My mother will wonder.”
“Yes.”
Noam’s heart beat harder. “Why stop here?”
Jesus’ voice was quiet. “Because you know the way.”
The unfinished ram lay in his palm. The wedge weighed down his other hand. Noam stared at the ridge path and understood what was being asked, though Jesus did not say it. His father could not take him now. The promised walk could not happen as it should have. But Noam could choose whether the broken promise would remain only a place of bitterness or become a place where truth was carried before God.
He shook his head. “I cannot go up there.”
Jesus waited.
“If I go, it means it is over.”
Jesus looked at him with deep kindness. “Noam, not going has not kept it from being over.”
The words hurt, but they were clean. Noam closed his eyes. For weeks he had refused the ridge in his heart because the ridge belonged to the promised morning that never came. Avoiding it had felt like loyalty, as if he could keep his father closer by not stepping into the place where his absence would be obvious. Now he saw the truth more clearly. He had not been keeping his father close. He had been keeping the wound in charge.
He opened his eyes and looked toward home. He could return now. He could carry the carving to Hadassah, the wedge to his mother, the story of Reuel’s field into their house. That would be enough for one day. More than enough. Yet the ridge waited in the dimming light, and he knew that if he did not go soon, fear would begin speaking again.
“Will You come?” he asked.
Jesus nodded. “Yes.”
Noam took one step onto the ridge path, then another. He did not feel brave. He felt like a boy carrying an unfinished carving and an old iron wedge up a hill his father had meant to climb with him. The evening air cooled as they rose. Nazareth dropped behind them, small and close, with smoke lifting from rooftops and voices gathering around evening fires. The land beyond opened in shadowed folds.
Halfway up, Noam stopped. He bent forward, breathing hard though the climb was not steep enough to explain it. Jesus stood beside him.
“I wanted him to choose me,” Noam said.
Jesus answered softly. “He did.”
“No. He chose Reuel.”
“He chose mercy, and he intended to return to you.”
Noam looked down at the village. “I do not know how to forgive a day.”
Jesus’ face held the last light. “Begin by telling the truth about it.”
Noam gripped the carving. The truth was larger now and harder to hate. His father had broken a promise. His father had loved him. His father had helped a neighbor. His father had meant to return. Noam had spoken cruelly. Noam had loved him. Fever had interrupted them all. God had seen the whole of it.
He continued climbing.
When they reached the ridge, the sky had turned the color of fading embers. Noam stood where he had once imagined standing beside his father. The view blurred as tears filled his eyes, but he did not look away.
He did not know what to say at first. Then, in a voice so low it nearly disappeared into the wind, he whispered, “I wanted you to come back.”
Jesus stood a little behind him, giving him space.
Noam held the unfinished ram against his chest. “I was angry. I am still angry.” He swallowed hard. “But I love you.”
The words did not travel to his father’s ears. Noam knew that. Yet they rose into the evening before God, and for the first time they did not seem trapped inside him. He wept then, not like in the workshop and not like in his mother’s arms, but with a quieter grief, one that had room to breathe.
Jesus prayed beside him, not loudly. Noam could not hear every word. He heard Father. He heard mercy. He heard the name Avidan, spoken with tenderness. He heard his own name too, carried in prayer as if it belonged safely before God.
When the prayer ended, Noam remained on the ridge until the first stars appeared.
He knew he still had to go home. He knew he had to tell his mother and Hadassah what Reuel had said. He knew the carving would make Hadassah cry. He knew the wedge would make his mother sit down and remember. He knew Matan would still be Matan tomorrow, and the jar would still need careful handling, and hunger would still return when the grain was gone.
But Noam also knew something else now. The last word between him and his father had not been the only word God heard. The broken morning had been larger than his guilt. His father’s love had been moving through it in ways Noam had not seen. Mercy had not erased the wound, but it had entered the place where the false story had ruled.
Jesus turned toward the path down.
Noam looked once more over the darkening land, then followed Him. The final light had nearly left the ridge, but the road home was still visible enough for the next true step.
Chapter Four
The path down from the ridge felt longer than the climb. Noam carried the iron wedge in one hand and the unfinished little ram in the other, and each object seemed to hold a different part of the day. The wedge was weight, memory, work, and inheritance. The carving was tenderness interrupted, love that had begun but had not reached the hands for which it was meant. Beside him, Jesus walked with the quiet steadiness that had marked every step since morning. He did not fill the dusk with explanation. He let the silence breathe, and for the first time in many weeks, Noam did not hate silence completely.
The village lights were small when they entered the lower lane. Smoke drifted from cooking fires. Families had drawn inward. The same houses that had looked exposed under noon now seemed guarded and close, each holding its own voices, its own hunger, its own tired mercy. Noam slowed when his house came into view. The doorway was open. Dalia stood just inside it, one hand on the frame, looking down the lane with the strained stillness of a mother who had waited longer than she wanted to admit.
Hadassah sat near the threshold with her knees drawn to her chest. When she saw Noam, she rose quickly, then stopped when she noticed his face. He knew he must have looked different. Not healed. Not happy. But something in him had been turned toward the light, and even a child could see when a hidden room had been opened.
Dalia stepped out. “You were gone long.”
“I know,” Noam said.
She looked at Jesus, not accusing Him, only searching. “Was he safe?”
“Yes,” Jesus answered.
The answer settled her, but only partly. Mothers did not stop being afraid because a child returned unharmed. Sometimes the fear remained behind, touching each possibility that had not happened.
Noam held up the wedge. “Reuel said it was Father’s.”
Dalia’s hand went to her mouth. She did not reach for it. Not at first. Her eyes fixed on the iron as if the tool itself had come home carrying dust from the last morning of her husband’s strength. Noam stepped closer and placed it in her hands. She received it with both palms, and when her fingers closed around it, her face folded.
Hadassah came near. “What is it?”
“Your father’s wedge,” Dalia whispered.
Hadassah looked at it without understanding its meaning, then looked back at Noam. “Did Reuel give it?”
“Yes.” Noam swallowed and opened his other hand. “And this.”
The little ram rested in his palm, unfinished and uneven, its head only partly shaped. Hadassah stared at it. For a few breaths, she did not move. Then she touched it with one finger, so gently that Noam felt his own throat close.
“He made that?” she asked.
“He started it while he waited for resin to set on the yoke.”
“For me?”
Noam nodded.
Hadassah took the carving and held it against her chest. At first her face shone with wonder, but wonder changed quickly into grief. Her mouth trembled. She looked at the unfinished head, the rough back, the place where their father’s knife had stopped.
“Why did he not finish it?” she asked.
Noam had no answer that would not wound her. Dalia lowered herself onto the threshold, still holding the wedge. Jesus remained near the doorway, present but not taking the family’s sorrow away from them.
Hadassah’s voice sharpened. “Why did he not bring it home?”
“He became sick,” Dalia said softly.
“But Reuel had it.”
“He was afraid to come,” Noam said.
Hadassah looked up at him, anger entering her tears. “Everyone is afraid. You were afraid. Mother was afraid. Reuel was afraid. I am tired of people being afraid and not saying things.”
Her words struck the house with the force of truth spoken by someone too young to soften it. Dalia closed her eyes. Noam felt the instinct to correct his sister rise in him, not because she was wrong, but because her anger exposed how much had been hidden from her. She had been the smallest one, and everyone had tried to protect her by leaving her outside the whole truth. Yet she had lived in the same house. She had heard the same silences. She had felt the same missing voice at the table.
Hadassah clutched the ram harder. “Did Father know I wanted him to come home?”
Dalia reached for her, but Hadassah stepped back. The movement hurt their mother, and Noam saw it clearly because he had made the same movement earlier. Fear could make a child refuse comfort and call it strength.
Jesus spoke gently. “Hadassah.”
She looked at Him, still crying.
“Your father’s love for you did not end because his hands stopped working.”
Her face crumpled. “But he did not finish it.”
“No,” Jesus said. “He did not.”
The honesty made Hadassah cry harder. Jesus did not rush past it. He did not pretend the little ram was enough. He did not turn the unfinished gift into a lesson. He let the child grieve the part that remained unfinished, because mercy did not require people to call pain beautiful before they could bring it to God.
Noam watched his sister and felt the final test of the day come toward him. He had received truth on the ridge. He had spoken into the evening. He had learned that his father’s last day held more love than he had known. Now Hadassah’s grief asked whether he would hold mercy only for himself or make room for someone else’s hurt to be heard.
He knelt in front of her, careful not to crowd her. “I was afraid,” he said.
She wiped her face with her wrist. “You would not talk to me.”
“I know.”
“You told me to go away.”
“I know.”
“You were mean after Father died.”
Noam flinched, but he did not defend himself. Jesus stood nearby, and Noam remembered the path toward Matan, the spring, the apology that had not felt finished because peace was more than the end of fighting.
“I was,” Noam said.
Hadassah looked confused by his agreement. Perhaps she had expected him to argue. Perhaps everyone in the house had grown used to hurt turning into another wall.
Noam took a breath. “I thought if I became quiet enough, I could hold everything together. But I was not holding it together. I was making you carry my silence too.”
Dalia began to weep again, but quietly.
Hadassah looked down at the ram. “I wanted to ask about him.”
“You can,” Noam said.
“You always looked angry.”
“I was angry.”
“At me?”
“No.” He shook his head, and the truth came more easily now, not because it was painless, but because the first hard door had already opened. “At myself. At the fever. At Father for leaving. At the day. At anyone who could still laugh. But not because you did anything wrong.”
Hadassah sat down on the threshold, the carving still pressed to her chest. Noam sat beside her. After a moment, Dalia joined them, the iron wedge resting across her lap. The three of them faced the lane together, as if their house could not contain all that had been spoken and needed the open air to hold some of it.
Jesus sat on the low stone near the doorway. Evening deepened. A few neighbors passed and greeted them softly, then moved on, sensing without knowing why that something tender had gathered there. Matan appeared once at the far end of the lane with an empty basket on his arm. He saw Noam, hesitated, and gave a small nod. Noam returned it. Nothing more was needed that night.
Hadassah turned the little ram in her hands. “Can someone finish it?”
Noam looked at the unfinished head. Earlier, he might have promised too quickly, eager to repair sadness with an answer. Now he knew some mending had to be approached with reverence.
“Maybe,” he said. “But not tonight.”
Hadassah looked disappointed.
Noam touched the carving lightly. “If it is finished, I want to remember where Father’s hands stopped.”
Dalia looked at him with surprise, then understanding. “Yes.”
Hadassah frowned. “Why?”
“Because he began it for you,” Noam said. “And because not everything unfinished means unloved.”
The words seemed to settle into Hadassah slowly. She looked at Jesus, and He nodded as if Noam had spoken something true.
Dalia held the wedge out to Noam. “This should be yours.”
He looked at it and felt fear again, smaller but still present. “I do not know how to use it well.”
“Then you will learn.”
“What if I damage things?”
Dalia gave a weary, real smile through her tears. “Then you will learn slowly.”
He took the wedge. The iron lay across his palm, dark and worn by his father’s hand. It no longer felt like accusation. It felt like responsibility, which still frightened him but did not crush him in the same way.
The cracked jar stood just inside the doorway, the resin drying under the splints. The borrowed jar stood beside it, full enough for morning. Noam looked at the two vessels and understood that their house would live for a while between what was damaged and what was borrowed, between what could be mended and what had to be received. Pride would not help them. Silence would not help them. Only truth with mercy in the same house would.
Dalia rose at last. “We should pray.”
Before his father died, evening prayer had been ordinary. Sometimes Noam listened. Sometimes he watched the door. Sometimes he was sleepy and impatient. After the burial, prayer had become difficult. His mother prayed in a thin voice. Noam stood silent, angry that God was addressed as present when the house felt so empty. Hadassah whispered words without understanding why her father did not answer them.
That night, when Dalia said they should pray, Noam did not step away.
They entered the house. Dalia set the wedge on the table and placed the unfinished ram beside it. Hadassah reached for Noam’s hand. He took it. His mother reached for his other hand, and for a moment he hesitated only because the closeness hurt. Then he let her hold him. Jesus stood with them in the small room, the same room that had held the cracked jar and the hidden confession. The lamplight moved gently on the walls.
Dalia began, but her voice failed.
Noam felt her hand tremble. All day others had helped him speak. Jesus had waited. His mother had told what she remembered. Reuel had opened the last morning wider. Now the room waited again, and he knew the next true step belonged to him.
He closed his eyes. “Father in heaven,” he said, his voice unsteady, “I am sorry for the words I used to hide my hurt. I am sorry for making my mother and my sister live near my anger and not know where it came from.”
Hadassah squeezed his hand.
Noam continued slowly. “Thank You that my father loved us. Thank You that You heard what we did not finish. Help us not be afraid of the truth in this house.”
Dalia wept openly then, but her hand remained firm around his. Noam felt tears on his own face.
He drew a breath. “Help me remember him rightly. Help me carry what is mine and not carry what belongs only to You.”
The prayer ended without a grand feeling. The roof did not lift. The jar did not become new. His father did not step into the doorway. But the room felt different. Not empty of sorrow, but no longer ruled by it.
Jesus prayed after him, quietly, His words simple and full of nearness. He thanked the Father for Avidan’s love, for Dalia’s endurance, for Hadassah’s tender heart, for Noam’s beginning, for every unfinished thing held in the mercy of God. Noam listened, and for the first time, hearing his father’s name in prayer did not feel like a blade. It felt like someone had placed the name where it belonged, not in the sealed chamber of guilt, but in the open presence of the Father.
After prayer, Dalia prepared the sleeping mats. Hadassah kept the unfinished ram beside her, tucked close as if it needed warmth. Noam stepped outside with Jesus. The lane was quiet now. Nazareth had folded into night. A dog barked far away, then stopped. Above the village, the ridge was only a darker shape against the sky.
“Will tomorrow be easier?” Noam asked.
Jesus looked toward the hill. “Tomorrow will have its own weight.”
Noam nodded. That answer felt truer than comfort that promised too much.
“Will I stop missing him?”
“No,” Jesus said. “Love does not become nothing because grief becomes gentler.”
Noam looked down at the ground. “I am afraid I will forget his voice.”
Jesus turned toward him. “Then speak what he taught you. Mercy remembered becomes a voice in the living.”
Noam stood with that for a while. He thought of patience with wood, of broken places needing to be understood, of the pressure that mended without splitting what it touched. He thought of his father saying a promise to a son mattered and a hungry house mattered too. He thought of his own words on the ridge, carried into the evening before God.
“I want to go back to Reuel tomorrow,” he said.
Jesus waited.
“To thank him for telling me. And maybe to help with the field.”
“That is a true step.”
Noam looked toward the spring. “And I should return Matan’s jar when ours can hold.”
“Yes.”
“And maybe let him talk to me.”
Jesus’ expression held the faintest warmth. “That also may be a true step.”
Noam gave a small breath that was almost a laugh, though not fully. It surprised him. The sound was thin and uncertain, but it did not feel wrong. From inside the house, Hadassah called his name sleepily, asking where the ram should be placed so it would not be stepped on in the morning.
Noam turned toward the doorway. “Near the wall,” he called. “Not where feet belong.”
Dalia’s soft laugh came after that, tired and wet with tears, but real. The sound entered the lane and vanished into the night like a small lamp being carried carefully through darkness.
Jesus began to leave.
Noam stepped after Him. “Jesus.”
He stopped.
Noam wanted to thank Him, but the day was too large for those words. He wanted to ask how Jesus had known where the crack was before anyone showed it to Him. He wanted to ask why His presence made lies feel unsafe and truth feel possible. He wanted to ask why a boy only two years younger than he was could stand in a poor house in Nazareth and make the room feel seen by God.
Instead he said, “Will You pray on the hill again?”
Jesus looked toward the dark ridge. “Yes.”
“For us?”
Jesus looked back at him. “Yes, Noam.”
The answer settled gently over everything. Noam watched Him walk down the lane toward Mary and Joseph’s house, His small figure moving through the quiet village with no need for anyone to notice. Then Noam went inside.
He lay awake for a while, listening to his mother’s breathing, to Hadassah turning once on her mat, to the little sounds of the house that had not changed and yet were no longer the same. The cracked jar dried by the doorway. The borrowed jar held water. The wedge rested on the table. The unfinished ram lay near Hadassah’s sleeping hand. Noam’s grief remained, but the false story had lost its throne. His father’s love was larger than the last angry sentence. God had not been absent from the unfinished morning. Mercy had walked into the house before Noam knew how to ask for it.
Before dawn, while the village still slept, Jesus returned to the quiet place above Nazareth. The stones held the night’s cold again. The hills waited under the first pale breath of morning. He knelt where He had knelt before, the village below Him full of poor houses, mended vessels, sleeping children, tired mothers, unfinished gifts, and grief slowly learning how to live under the mercy of God.
He prayed in the stillness, not loudly, not for anyone to hear, His face turned toward the Father. The day behind Him had held a cracked jar, a wounded boy, a grieving mother, a small sister, a humbled friend, a field, a ridge, and words finally brought into the light. The day ahead would hold ordinary burdens again. Bread would need baking. Water would need carrying. Wood would need shaping. The poor would still be poor. The grieving would still miss the dead. Children would still speak before they understood the cost of speech.
But in one small house in Nazareth, silence no longer ruled alone.
Jesus remained in prayer as morning gathered over the village, and the Father who sees every hidden wound held the whole place in mercy.
Your friend, Douglas Vandergraph
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Consider the moment the engineer sees the dialogue box. It is late April 2026, in a Menlo Park office that has been emptier than it used to be, and she has just opened her work laptop after a four-day stretch on an overdue project. A grey panel informs her that a piece of software named the Model Capability Initiative is now installed on her device. It will capture mouse movements. It will log keystrokes. It will record clicks. It will take periodic snapshots of whatever she has on screen. It will run across hundreds of applications she uses without thinking, from her IDE to her Slack channels to her browser tabs on GitHub, Google, LinkedIn and Wikipedia. The data will train AI agents. There is no opt-out on a company device. She can sign the acknowledgement, or she can not. The reading time is ninety seconds.
What the panel does not say is that her professional judgement, the decisions she will make about how to frame a problem, which library to reach for, when to step away from a function that is not working, are now an input to a system whose stated purpose is to perform those decisions without her. The accumulated craft of her career is being read out of her keystrokes and into a model. There is no extra pay. There is no additional consent beyond the employment contract she signed when she joined. There is no realistic refusal that does not amount to a resignation, three weeks before the company begins the largest round of redundancies in its history.
This is the scene Reuters reported in an exclusive on 21 April 2026, in a story picked up by Fortune, TechCrunch, the BBC, CNBC, TechSpot, Fast Company and the Financial Times. It has since become a reference point in a debate the law has not yet caught up with. An employer is collecting data on workers without giving them a meaningful choice, and the lawyers consulted say the practice is probably legal. The story has a different shape, too. The data is no longer the by-product of work. The data is the work. What Meta is collecting is the cognitive substrate of professional judgement, harvested at scale, to train systems whose explicit purpose is to make the careers themselves redundant.
The question that follows is whether the employment contract as currently constructed is the right instrument for that exchange. If the expertise a worker has spent two decades cultivating can be extracted as a training corpus under the boilerplate provisions of a standard at-will agreement, what does employment mean? What does ownership mean? And what does consent mean when the practical alternative to consenting is to be unemployed?
The factual record is straightforward. In mid-April 2026, Meta circulated an internal communication on its Workplace platform announcing that the Model Capability Initiative would be installed on the work computers of its US-based employees. The tool would log mouse movements, clicks and keystrokes, take periodic on-screen snapshots, and run across hundreds of approved applications. The list, as reported by CNBC and TechSpot, included Google, LinkedIn, Wikipedia, GitHub, Slack, the Atlassian suite, and Meta's own properties including Threads and Manus. The data would be used solely for AI model training. Managers would not have access. There would be, the memo said, safeguards to protect sensitive content.
Reuters added two details that subsequent reporting has confirmed. European employees are entirely exempt. The General Data Protection Regulation requires explicit, freely given consent for the kind of monitoring MCI involves, and the working consensus among European employment lawyers is that consent obtained under threat of dismissal is not, in any meaningful sense, freely given. Rather than litigate the point, Meta drew a line at the Atlantic. The second detail is that there is no opt-out on a US-issued company device. When an engineering manager asked on the internal Workplace platform how to decline, Meta's chief technology officer Andrew Bosworth answered in writing that no opt-out existed. The choice presented to US staff was not a choice between participating and abstaining. It was a choice between participating and leaving.
Andy Stone, Meta's vice-president for communications, defended the programme in language quoted across the coverage. “If we're building agents to help people complete everyday tasks using computers, our models need real examples of how people actually use them,” Stone told reporters, citing “things like mouse movements, clicking buttons, and navigating dropdown menus.” The framing presents MCI as a research necessity. The agents Meta intends to build cannot be trained on synthetic data, the argument runs, because synthetic data does not capture how a competent professional actually navigates an interface under deadline pressure.
What Stone did not address is the obvious follow-on. If the goal of the agents is to perform tasks Meta employees currently perform, and if the way to train them is to record how those employees perform those tasks, then the employee is being asked to teach the system that will replace them, using the company's hardware, on the company's time, under the terms of the company's employment contract. The contract was not drafted with this exchange in mind. Whether it can carry the weight of it is the question the legal scholarship, and the workers themselves, are now turning to.
The first thing to note about the law that governs MCI is that, in the United States, there is not very much of it. Workplace electronic monitoring is governed federally by the Electronic Communications Privacy Act of 1986, a statute drafted to address the wire-tapping of telephone calls. The ECPA prohibits the interception of electronic communications without consent. It carves out a broad business-use exception for monitoring on employer-owned equipment. The consent provision can be satisfied by an acknowledgement clause buried in an onboarding packet, signed once at the beginning of an employment relationship that may go on for a decade. The notion that an employee who signed such a clause in 2017 has thereby consented, in any morally substantive sense, to having their keystrokes mined for AI training in 2026 is one the statute, on a plain reading, accommodates.
There is no federal employee-monitoring statute that addresses behavioural data collected as training material for a generative model. The state-level patchwork is uneven. Connecticut, Delaware and New York require written notice before electronic monitoring is deployed. California's Consumer Privacy Act extends some employee-data rights but does not give workers a substantive veto on monitoring of company devices. Illinois's Biometric Information Privacy Act is narrow in scope and does not reach keystroke data. None of these regimes resembles the consent and proportionality framework the GDPR imposes on European employers.
The legal experts consulted by Fast Company described MCI as probably legal under current US employment law, while describing the consent frameworks the legality relies upon as substantively empty. Kayne McGladrey, a senior member of the IEEE, observed in coverage by TechTarget that the level of surveillance MCI implements “is something that can be done because we don't have a federal privacy act in the United States.” The position is consistent with that of Ifeoma Ajunwa, the Asa Griggs Candler Professor of Law at Emory Law School. Her 2023 book The Quantified Worker traces the doctrinal evolution of workplace monitoring from the Pinkerton agents of the late nineteenth century to the algorithmic management of the 2020s. American employment law, in her account, was built on assumptions about what an employer could reasonably know about a worker that recent technology has rendered obsolete. The statutes never contemplated continuous behavioural capture, because the technology to do it at scale did not exist. The result is a regime in which almost any form of monitoring on employer-owned equipment is permissible, because no rule was ever written to prohibit it.
Brishen Rogers, a professor at Georgetown Law and the author of the 2023 MIT Press book Data and Democracy at Work, makes a parallel argument. Labour law does more than fail to constrain data collection. It actively grants employers the right to gather workplace data and to develop new technologies on the basis of it, in a way that encourages firms to use those technologies as instruments of cost reduction. The legal silence is a structural choice. Data flowing out of the labour process is treated as the employer's property by default, with no corresponding obligation to share value, governance or access with the workers whose activity produced it.
In Europe, the same data would not be treated the same way. Article 6 of the GDPR requires a lawful basis for processing, and the European Data Protection Board's guidance, updated in 2023, holds that employee consent is generally not a valid basis in an employment context, because the power asymmetry renders consent insufficiently free. Continuous keystroke monitoring of the kind MCI implements would require a separate lawful basis, a proportionality assessment, a data-protection impact assessment, and meaningful worker consultation through the works councils that German, French, Dutch and Italian law variously mandate. The reason MCI does not run on European Meta machines is that European law would have required a different conversation, with a different set of actors, before it could lawfully have been implemented.
The American legal floor is low, but it is not infinitely low, and the response from inside Meta has been instructive. Within days of the memo's circulation, an internal petition opposing MCI had attracted more than 1,000 employee signatures, a figure reported by TechCrunch and Cybernews. Flyers appeared on walls of Meta's offices in Menlo Park and New York City reading “Don't want to work at the Employee Data Extraction Factory?” and directing colleagues to the petition. The flyers cited the National Labor Relations Act, the 1935 statute protecting workers' right to engage in concerted activity, whose protections extend to collective action against surveillance technologies affecting terms of employment. In the United Kingdom, a formal union organising drive began in early May 2026 among the company's London-based engineering and product staff.
What the petition does not contain is the harder claim made by labour scholars outside the company: that the data Meta is collecting is not Meta's to take. The employment contract governs what work the worker performs in exchange for what compensation. It does not, and on a defensible reading cannot, govern the transfer of the worker's cognitive patterns, the trace of their professional judgement, the substance of their accumulated craft, to a different category of asset. The keystrokes are not a by-product of the work like the lunch wrappers in the office bin. They are the work, in the sense that the work consists of choosing where to put attention, which sequence of inputs to make, and when to revise.
This is the argument Daron Acemoglu and Simon Johnson developed in their 2023 book Power and Progress and in Acemoglu's The Simple Macroeconomics of AI, a National Bureau of Economic Research working paper from May 2024. Their position is that the deployment of AI as a substitute for human labour, rather than as a complement to it, is a choice shaped by an institutional environment that systematically privileges employers' rights to extract value from workers' tacit knowledge over workers' rights to retain control over it. Acemoglu has called explicitly for legal frameworks that discourage “expertise theft” by establishing workers' ownership of their capabilities and creative output. The MCI rollout is the fully predictable consequence of a labour-law regime that has placed no such ownership claim in the worker's hands, in an industry with the technical capacity to extract whatever the law does not actively protect.
There is a deeper conceptual problem with what MCI is trying to do, and the literature on it is older than the programme. Michael Polanyi's 1966 book The Tacit Dimension introduced the proposition that we know more than we can tell. The skills of an experienced professional are constituted by an enormous mass of implicit, embodied, contextual judgement that cannot be fully articulated even by the person who possesses it. Polanyi's claim, generalised by the MIT economist David Autor in his 2014 paper Polanyi's Paradox and the Shape of Employment Growth, was that this tacit knowledge constitutes a hard ceiling on automation, because computers can only be programmed to do what we can articulate.
The argument that has driven the past decade of AI development is that the ceiling can be lowered not by articulating the tacit knowledge but by capturing enough behavioural traces of it that a sufficiently large statistical model can recover the pattern without anyone having to write it down. This is the bet on which the large language model industry is built. It is the bet on which MCI is built. If you cannot extract a senior engineer's intuition by interviewing them, perhaps you can extract it by recording their keystrokes over a year. The bet is, on Polanyi's terms, a wager that the tacit dimension of professional knowledge can be reduced to a behavioural surface without remainder. There are good reasons to doubt it. There are also good commercial reasons to make it, because if it pays out, the resulting model can perform work currently performed by human professionals at a cost asymptotically close to zero.
Antonio Aloisi of IE University in Madrid and Valerio De Stefano of Osgoode Hall Law School in Toronto have spent five years working on the legal implications of what they call algorithmic bosses. Their 2022 book Your Boss Is an Algorithm argues that AI in workplace decision-making does not simply automate tasks. It restructures the relations of authority and accountability that have historically constrained managerial discretion. An algorithmic manager is a different kind of authority, one whose decisions cannot be contested in the ways human decisions can be contested, because the reasoning is not legible to the worker and the responsibility is diffused across a chain of developers, deployers and vendors none of whom carries the full weight. MCI is one step removed from algorithmic management, because the model being trained is not, at the time of training, supervising the worker. But the substantive logic is the same. The data flows from the worker to a system that will perform the worker's job, with no flow back: no governance, no compensation, no audit right, no ability to inspect what the model has learned.
Veena Dubal, professor of law at the University of California, Irvine, has been making a related argument from the gig-economy side. Her 2023 Columbia Law Review article On Algorithmic Wage Discrimination documents how ride-hailing platforms use granular behavioural data to produce what she calls personalised pay, in which the wage varies in real time according to dozens of signals invisible to the worker. “Platform companies have been at the cutting edge,” she has said, “of trying to experiment with ways to control workers without it being obvious. When these experiments work, they leach into other industries and can affect people in formal employment.” MCI is a pure instance of the leach Dubal predicted: the mechanism by which platform companies turned gig workers into involuntary contributors to their own algorithmic management is now applied within the conventional employment relationship at a salaried tech firm. That Meta engineers earn six-figure salaries does not change the structural logic of the exchange.
The story of employer attempts to capture worker knowledge is older than the computer industry by more than a century. Frederick Winslow Taylor's The Principles of Scientific Management, published in 1911 and drawing on work he had begun at Bethlehem Steel in the 1890s, is the canonical instance. Taylor's project was to extract from the heads of skilled workers the knowledge they used to do their jobs and to redistribute it to managers, who could then redesign the work in standardised forms that did not require the knowledge to be held by any individual worker. The point was to convert the workers' tacit competence into the firm's explicit property.
Taylor's method produced famous resistance, including the 1911 strikes at the Watertown Arsenal and the 1915 prohibition of stopwatch studies in federal workshops. The historian Harry Braverman, in his 1974 book Labor and Monopoly Capital, framed Taylorism as the systematic separation of conception from execution: the transfer of the planning of work, and the knowledge required to plan it, from the worker to the manager. The de-skilling of the labour process, on Braverman's account, was not an accidental side-effect but its central purpose, the mechanism by which capital secured itself against the bargaining power of skilled labour.
The MCI programme is, in important respects, a Taylorist project at a higher level of abstraction. It is not trying to extract the manual motions of a steel worker. It is trying to extract the cognitive motions of a knowledge worker. The instrument is no longer a stopwatch but a behavioural-capture pipeline feeding a large neural network. The intellectual purpose is the same: to convert what is held tacitly inside the heads of workers, who can quit and take it with them, into an asset held explicitly by the firm. Taylor's workers struck against the stopwatch, and the strike was about money but also about something more fundamental. They understood that what was being extracted was not just their time but their craft, and that the firm intended to use the extraction to render the craft itself obsolete. The flyers in the Menlo Park hallways in May 2026 are saying, in updated language, something Taylor's workers said in 1911.
The mid-twentieth-century history of knowledge work was in significant part a history of negotiated arrangements between firms and workers whose value could not be extracted by Taylorist means. The bargain, imperfectly and unevenly, was that the knowledge worker retained ownership of their professional identity, their portable skill, the relationships they built, in exchange for the firm getting the output of their labour and the right to direct it. The recognition that the knowledge worker's expertise was something the firm could rent rather than own was the structural backbone of the post-war professional economy. What MCI proposes is the rescission of that bargain. The keystrokes are not the output of their labour in the conventional sense. They are the trace of how they think while they work. To claim those traces as a corporate asset is to assert ownership over precisely the thing the post-war bargain had reserved to the worker.
The gains from AI automation, Acemoglu argues, accrue principally to the owners of the AI systems, and the costs accrue principally to the workers whose tasks the systems displace. If the workers whose tasks are being displaced are also the workers whose behavioural data trained the systems, the asymmetry compounds. The workers contribute the input, do not share in the output, and are the bearers of the displacement risk the output creates.
Aiha Nguyen, who leads the Labor Futures programme at the Data and Society Research Institute, framed the wider pattern in her 2021 report The Constant Boss: Work Under Digital Surveillance. The datafication of work produces a sequence of effects in which speedups, employment insecurity, the shifting of risk from employers to workers, and the exacerbation of racial profiling all accompany the technological roll-out. MCI brings the same pattern into the white-collar economy. The Meta engineer in Menlo Park is, in structural terms, in the same position as the warehouse picker whose every movement is logged: producing data the firm will use to reorganise or eliminate the work she is doing now.
The point is not that MCI is uniquely bad. The point is that MCI is uniquely visible. The same logic operates, in less explicit form, across the technology industry. Microsoft's Recall feature, the AI-coding assistants from GitHub Copilot to Cognition's Devin, the productivity-analytics tools sold by Microsoft Viva, Workday and Veriato: each is, in some measure, a system that captures fine-grained behavioural data from knowledge workers and uses it to train or refine models. Most are presented as productivity enhancements rather than training pipelines. MCI's contribution is that it stripped away the click-through fiction. Bosworth told the engineers there was no opt-out, and the consequence was a petition. According to 2025 studies reported by The Register and Computerworld, between 74 and 80 per cent of US employers now use some form of online tracking on remote or hybrid staff. The employee-monitoring software market is projected to reach $7.61 billion by 2029. Nearly half of monitored workers said in 2025 they would consider leaving if surveillance increased; 45 per cent reported monitoring had harmed their mental health.
The legal experts who told Fast Company that MCI was probably legal were not endorsing the programme. They were diagnosing the gap between what the law permits and what the moment requires. A consent regime that meets the substantive standard implied by the European tradition would have to look quite different from the regime that currently obtains.
The first requirement is informational. The employee must be told, in language they can understand, what data will be collected, for what purpose, for how long, how it will be used in training, what models will be trained on it, and whether the resulting models will be sold or deployed in ways that affect the employee's own employment prospects. A notification box that runs for ninety seconds before the worker has to start their day does not approach this.
The second requirement is structural. The consent must be obtained in conditions that allow it to be refused without consequence. A consent obtained from an employee who can be dismissed at will for any non-protected reason is not, on any reasonable reading, freely given. Meta did not extend the programme to the EU not because EU keystrokes are technically distinguishable from US keystrokes, but because the EU's structural consent regime would not accept the at-will American template.
The third requirement is governance. The data has to be subject to oversight regimes that include the workers whose behaviour generated it. Trade-union consultation, works-council representation, designated worker-data trustees: each has been proposed in the relevant literature and each has analogues elsewhere in the OECD. The current US regime offers none. The data Meta collects flows to Meta's Superintelligence Labs, led by Alexandr Wang, the former Scale AI chief executive who joined as part of Meta's $14.3 billion investment in Scale in 2024. The workers whose data it is have no representation in Wang's governance, no access to the models, no audit right, no portability claim.
The fourth requirement is compensation. The value of the data Meta is collecting is, by the company's own logic, substantial. If it were not, the company would not have rolled out MCI in the face of a thousand-signature petition, a union drive, internal posters and the worst week of press its AI division has had since the Cambridge Analytica era. Mark Zuckerberg has committed up to $135 billion in capital expenditure for 2026, the bulk on AI infrastructure, and the agents MCI data is intended to train are central to that spend. A worker whose keystrokes are an input to a $135 billion bet has, in any account of value that takes labour seriously, a claim on a portion of the upside. The standard employment contract does not acknowledge the claim exists.
There is a temptation, in writing about cases like MCI, to end with a list of policy prescriptions and a confident assertion that the prescriptions, if adopted, would resolve the difficulty. The temptation should be resisted. The difficulty is real, and not all of it is resolvable by legislation.
Part of the difficulty is that there are versions of MCI that are clearly fine and versions that are clearly not, and the legal vocabulary needed to distinguish them has not been developed. If Meta were collecting code review discussions to fine-tune a model that helped its own engineers spot bugs faster, with no plan to deploy elsewhere and no plan to eliminate engineering roles, the case would look different. If a hospital were capturing the conversations of senior consultants with junior doctors to train an AI assistant that helped juniors learn from seniors' reasoning, the case would look different again. The features that make MCI feel like an extraction, the asymmetry of value flow, the absence of meaningful refusal, the displacement risk for the workers whose data is being used, are not present in every instance of workplace AI training.
Part of the difficulty is that the workers themselves do not have a simple position. The Meta engineers signing the petition are not, in most cases, anti-AI. They work in an organisation whose strategic direction is AI development and whose stock options pay for their mortgages. Many have personally built features of the models being trained. Their objection is not that AI training data should not exist. It is that they did not consent, in any substantive sense, to being the source of it, and that the institution refused to give them a meaningful way to decline. The objection is, in the proper sense of the word, procedural. A regime that addressed it would still leave the underlying question, about whether AI training on worker behavioural data is a legitimate corporate activity at all, unresolved.
Part of the difficulty, finally, is that the underlying question is genuinely hard. The case for treating worker expertise as inalienable is the case for a stronger property regime in human capital than any developed economy currently maintains. The case for treating it as fully alienable, already sold by signing the employment contract, is the case for a regime that treats human cognition as factor input on the same terms as raw material. Both positions are coherent. Both have intellectual defenders. The settlement between them, in any actually existing economy, is some negotiated middle position that depends on the relative bargaining power of the workers and the firms, on the cultural understandings the parties bring to the negotiation, and on the legal and political environment in which the negotiation takes place.
The MCI memo was a moment in which that settlement was renegotiated unilaterally, in the firm's favour, in a jurisdiction whose legal regime had no mechanism for the workers to push back through institutional channels. The petition, the posters, the union drive and the press coverage are the workers pushing back through the channels that were available, which are not the channels through which durable renegotiation usually takes place. What is visible is that the old settlement, the post-war professional bargain in which the knowledge worker rented their output to the firm while retaining their expertise as their own, is no longer the operative assumption inside at least one of the largest technology companies in the world. What assumption will replace it, and at whose initiative, is the question the next decade of labour law and labour economics is going to have to answer. The engineer who clicked through the acknowledgement on her work laptop in April was not the first person to be asked it, and she will not be the last. What she was the first to do, along with the thousand colleagues who signed the petition behind her, is to make it impossible to pretend the question had not been asked.

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
wystswolf
Eruptions are not selective. Everything get's burned equally.
A living book About the dead
Becomes testimony If the subjects still draw breath.
Small paper rooms where things unsaid drew breath between two
invisible souls, But suddenly all that blood
filled the vesicles and the organs and eyes pierced the nakedness
Like a Scalpel.
Nay—
Like a rusty Spoon.
There is the ordinary: Ticket stubs. Weather. Sawdust of a days labor.
The kind of scraps a life keeps to one day look again and remember the tiny forgotten joys.
But the mind for her inner world stumbled in innocence and a young morality.
Not as a daughter opening paper, but as a giant stumbling through a city.
And there I was, In the sunshine of her anger.
Under law.
My tenderness made evidence. Every mile given motive. Every meal, every laugh, every child dragged beneath the black light and ordered to confess.
To love a mother is well, unless it is the wrong kind of love.
Or comes at the wrong time.
Mine was both.
So the years fell backward.
All the old rooms changed color. Every laugh, every dinner The quiet nights and the games in the sand.
All our lives. Suddenly the memories were not the warmth of a man loving deeply and like family.
They were the desperate manipulations of a prowling wolf.
A hidden love may poison a present without counterfeiting the past.
But not tonight. Time travel went back and killed the boy.
He loved the children as children. The father as a man. The house as a house. The mother as a flame He kept it behind glass so long even she mistook restraint for coldness.
Call that cowardice, maybe.
He caledl it hunger buried alive.
The long theology of not touching the thing that burns.
But do not call a life's kindness the long game.
How could she know that he hid to preserve his soul and sanity alive, that his mask was not corrosive, but preservative.
How could she know her wellspring Fell in love not with the performance, but honest breath.
The same earnestness that made his accuser feel inspired and loved.
That man was never a lie.
Do not say the beach lied. Do not say the miles were lust in flops. Do not say the hand on the shoulder was a thief rehearsing.
That is what rage does when it rides upon righteousness.
The trampling steed.
It needs one villain large enough to hold the terror.
It needs one sewer-word for all this human weather.
Debauchery.
God, what a word.
A word with mud on its boots. A word that wants no face. A word that makes a woman porcelain and a man the filth.
As if she had no ache of her own.
As if the man arrived with a rope and not a knot.
As if love were only clean when it had permission.
Juliette taught us that even when there is no ornament, or possession, Love still has binds.
Now everyone is guarding someone.
The daughter guards the mother. The mother guards the wreckage. The father guards the name of the house. God, maybe, guards the silence.
And he, he stands outside it all, holding the match, holding the wound, holding the years that were real even if now the paint peeles back.
There is no defense that does not sound like pleading.
No apology that does not sound like strategy.
No explanation that can enter a room where the hammer is still swinging.
So let the notebook close.
Smoke burns my eyes.
We let the child hate him with the clean bright hate of someone whose playrooms just made a terrible sound.
But somewhere beneath the rubble there remains this:
He was not lying.
He was sometimes failing.
There is a difference.
And God help us, it may be the difference between a man and a monster.
This is important. Because he always believed Himself a monster.
While mother was teaching Him to fly.
Reality arrived, revoked the license, condemned his love of flight and hacked in the most cruel way possible the wings the wings that bore him.
—
#poetry
from
wystswolf

Beautiful reminder of cruelty
Miles measures our distance. Hours measures our ache.
Blue for the sea of time between us, and the little Caravelle built to cross it.
Time does not exist, except to measure what we do not have.
Then it becomes a barrier, vast and impenetrable.
Except to love. Except to memory. Except to thought.
When I am with you, time has no meaning.
When we are apart, it returns as the cruel master it has always been.
#poetry #wyst
from
Roscoe's Story
In Summary: * Waiting patiently for coverage of tonight's Indiana Fever Game to begin. The wife just came inside grumbling about how hot it is outdoors. Yeah. Really. It may not be Summer officially yet, but we're getting a serious dose of South Texas heat and humidity now and for at least the week ahead. Triple digit heat indexes daily. Thank God for air-conditioning, I say.
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.
Health Metrics: * bw= 235.9 lbs. * bp= 165/97 (67)
Exercise: * morning stretches, balance exercises, kegel pelvic floor exercises, half squats, calf raises, wall push-ups, BP breathing exercises
Diet: * 05:45 – 1 banana * 06:30 – 1 pb&j sandwich * 09:20 – garden salad with seafood salad * 13:00 – ground beef patties, mashed potatoes, mushroom gravy * 14:30 – big bowl of lugau
Activities, Chores, etc.: * 03:00 – listen to local news talk radio * 04:00 – bank accounts activity monitored. * 04:15 – read, write, pray, follow news reports from various sources, surf the socials, nap * 12:00 to 12:45 – go to the bank, take care of business * 13:00 to 15:15 – watch old game shows and eat lunch at home with Sylvia * 16:00 – listen to the Jack Riccardi Show
Chess: * 15:35 – moved in all pending CC games
from
💚
Our Father Who art in Heaven Hallowed be Thy name Thy Kingdom come Thy will be done on Earth as it is in Heaven Give us this day our daily Bread And forgive us our trespasses As we forgive those who trespass against us And lead us not into temptation But deliver us from evil
Amen
Jesus is Lord! Come Lord Jesus!
Come Lord Jesus! Christ is Lord!
from
💚

In noted pair to this addition A flurry for our rise And first in flight The venerous heart in adulation For life and days To give us clear and Rome We sacrificed it all But there between Mercy for our skies And praying Seoul Will market for the day And this as many Better known to see The wild redemption- of seamless Earth Will fill our days to never Yet hanging land The Victory of our stripe As best recover The tidal disabandon With mercury deliver This height in mercy And playing with our wild To work without- refraction then The Earth will be a dollar But sudden wind In carrying orchard far The splice to reason for Carrying the wave- of molten thin and water And ever for The silent more A place for time and then Applianced up for scale And then the Sun In highest glory, Earth.
from Things Left Unsaid
At the bus terminal there was a guy in one of the shelters. His face was red, and all around his mouth was purple with wine stain. He had a thin plastic bag that had three or four bottles of wine in it. I could hear the bottles clanging together. I was waiting for the bag to split and for the bottles to fall and smash. He was incredibly drunk. Wine drunk. He was trying to sit on the shelter bench and it looked like he was going to fall off of it. I felt dizzy just looking at him. I'm not sure how things all turned out for him. My bus arrived. I got on it and left.
At the bus terminal I was walking on the platform. There was a woman in front of me, and in front of her there was a guy. The three of us were about ten feet apart walking at the same pace. Suddenly the guy laid down on the platform. Didn't fall or anything. Just gently laid down on his side like a person would at home on the carpet. Like to play with the cat or something. When the woman got near him she stopped, and sort of leaned over him. Right when I got near both of them she said, “are you okay?” He looked up at her, and said, “no,” and then very suddenly he changed his response to, “uh, yes!” Then he got up and continued walking. It was very odd. He might have been high. I do not know. We all continued on.
At the bus terminal I was standing on the platform waiting for my bus to arrive. It was a hot and sunny summer day with a nice breeze. A woman with a light dress was walking towards me. The wind caught her dress and it blew up. Not just a flash of upper leg or anything. Like right up. If she had raised her arms at that exact moment the dress might have blown right off, and away like a balloon. She was not wearing anything under it. She was right in my line of sight. Suddenly right in front of me, naked woman for a second or two. I was standing there, and then I continued to just stand there when she walked by me. Neither of us reacted at all to the occurrence. What could we say or do though really? Any reaction I could have had would have been inappropriate. Laugh? Nope. Nod? Nope. Thanks? Nope. OMG? Nope. Yes! High five! Nope. No response was the only option. And what reaction could she have had really? There is just nothing. She couldn't blame me for the wind and scratch my eyes out. She didn't have to apologize.
It was like, oh,
that just happened.
from
Kuir - cultura e inspiração Cuir
Este caderno não escolheu as suas referências por acaso. Cada texto aqui mobilizado representa uma filiação intelectual e política — uma escolha sobre quem merece ser lido, citado e colocado em diálogo. A teoria das masculinidades de Connell, o realismo agencial de Barad, a intersecionalidade de Crenshaw, os conhecimentos situados de Haraway, o testemunho de Vincent — são vozes que vêm de tradições diferentes, de posições diferentes, de corpos diferentes. O que as une é a recusa da neutralidade: todas partem de algum lugar, todas têm uma posição, todas produzem conhecimento a partir de uma aposta política sobre o que importa pensar e por quê.
Esta bibliografia é também uma cuirografia — uma escrita situada das leituras que tornaram este caderno possível. Não é exaustiva. É honesta.
Raewyn Connell, Masculinities (1995, 2.ª edição 2005). A obra fundadora da teoria das masculinidades. Connell introduziu os conceitos de masculinidade hegemónica, subordinada, cúmplice e marginalizada, mostrando que a masculinidade é uma estrutura relacional de poder e não um atributo individual. Indispensável — e incontornável para qualquer análise que recuse essencialismos.
Richard Howson e Jeff Hearn, Hegemony, Hegemonic Masculinity, and Beyond, in Routledge International Handbook of Masculinity Studies (2020). Uma revisão crítica do conceito de masculinidade hegemónica que sublinha a sua natureza relacional e a centralidade do exterior constitutivo. Útil para compreender a hegemonia como estrutura dinâmica e não como categoria estática.
C.J. Pascoe, Dude, You're a Fag: Adolescent Masculinity and the Fag Discourse (2005). Um estudo etnográfico decisivo que mostra como o insulto homofóbico funciona como prática regulatória de género que disciplina todos os homens — e não apenas os gays. A análise interseccional de Pascoe revela que o fag discourse articula simultaneamente género, sexualidade e raça.
C.J. Pascoe e Tristan Bridges, Fag Discourse in a Post-Homophobic Era (2018). Atualização do conceito que analisa como a regulação da masculinidade persiste e se reconfigura mesmo em contextos aparentemente mais tolerantes. A tolerância liberal não elimina a vigilância — transforma-a.
Tim Barrett, Multiple Forms of Masculinity in Gay Male Subcultures (2020). Barrett analisa a pluralidade de masculinidades dentro das subculturas gays, mostrando que a subordinação não é homogénea e que as hierarquias internas às comunidades cuir articulam raça, classe e estética corporal.
Stephen Lawton, Bi+ Men and Their Intimate Partners: Sexual Identities, Intimate Relationships and Binegativity (2023). Um dos poucos trabalhos que leva a sério a especificidade da experiência bissexual masculina, mostrando como a binegatividade opera tanto nos espaços heteronormativos como nos espaços cuir. A invisibilidade não é ausência — é produção ativa.
Henry Rubin, The Logic of Treatment: Transsexuality, Medicine, and the Medical Model (2006). Rubin demonstra como o sistema médico-psiquiátrico não se limita a responder às identidades trans — participa ativamente na sua produção. Uma leitura essencial para compreender a transmasculinidade como fenómeno materialmente produzido por aparelhos institucionais.
Jamison Green, Look! No, Don't! The Visibility Dilemma for Transsexual Men (2006). Green aborda o dilema da visibilidade trans masculina e mostra como a passabilidade é um campo minado de classe, raça e acesso desigual a tecnologias corporais. A visibilidade expõe; a invisibilidade apaga. Não há saída fácil.
Miriam Abelson e Tristan Kade, Trans Masculinities (2020). Uma síntese contemporânea que articula experiências trans com teoria feminista e estudos críticos de masculinidade, sublinhando que os corpos são lugares cruciais onde a masculinidade se materializa — e onde a exclusão se inscreve.
Karen Barad, Meeting the Universe Halfway: Quantum Physics and the Entanglement of Matter and Meaning (2007). O texto central do realismo agencial — uma onto-epistemologia que recusa a separação entre matéria e discurso e defende que a realidade é produzida por práticas material-discursivas. Difícil, exigente, transformador. Nenhuma leitura sobre género, corpo e poder fica igual depois de Barad.
Karen Barad, TransMaterialities: Trans*/Matter/Realities and Queer Political Imaginings (2015). Um texto mais acessível onde Barad articula o realismo agencial com questões trans e cuir. Uma entrada mais curta no pensamento baradiano para quem quer começar por aqui antes de enfrentar Meeting the Universe Halfway.
Judith Butler, Problemas de Género: Feminismo e Subversão da Identidade (1990, tradução portuguesa Orfeu Negro, 2023). Butler argumenta que o género é um efeito performativo — produzido pela repetição de normas e não pela expressão de uma essência interior. O texto que fundou a teoria cuir. A tradução portuguesa permite finalmente ler este clássico na nossa língua.
Donna Haraway, Situated Knowledges: The Science Question in Feminism and the Privilege of Partial Perspective (1988). O ensaio fundador dos conhecimentos situados. Haraway mostra que não existe olhar de lugar nenhum — que a pretensão de objetividade universal é sempre o privilégio de quem pode esconder a sua posição. Uma das leituras mais politicamente necessárias deste caderno.
Donna Haraway, The Promises of Monsters: A Regenerative Politics for Inappropriate/d Others (1992). Um texto complementar que desenvolve a ideia de figuras parciais e conexões inesperadas como estratégia política e epistemológica. Lido em conjunto com Situated Knowledges, aprofunda a proposta de uma objetividade encarnada e responsável.
Pierre Bourdieu, La domination masculine (1998). Bourdieu analisa como a dominação masculina se naturaliza por meio de esquemas de perceção incorporados e reproduzidos por instituições e práticas quotidianas. A violência simbólica — central nesta obra — atua precisamente por não se apresentar como violência, mas como evidência, consenso ou normalidade.
Kimberlé Crenshaw, Demarginalizing the Intersection of Race and Sex (1989) e Mapping the Margins: Intersectionality, Identity Politics, and Violence against Women of Color (1991). Os textos fundadores da intersecionalidade. Crenshaw mostrou que os sistemas de opressão articulam-se produzindo experiências específicas de discriminação que as categorias jurídicas e políticas dominantes não conseguem captar. Escreveu a partir das mulheres negras — e criou uma ferramenta para pensar qualquer experiência que recuse tratar as opressões como compartimentos estanques.
Elisabeth Holzleithner, Law and Social Justice: Intersectional Dimensions (2024). Uma análise rigorosa dos limites do direito anti discriminatório face a experiências interseccionais. Holzleithner mostra que o sistema jurídico tende a proteger categorias estáveis e a deixar de fora quem vive na intersecção — não por omissão, mas por desenho estrutural.
Vanessa E. Thompson, Entangled Genealogies?! Intersections and Abolition (2024). Thompson articula interseccionalidade e abolicionismo, mostrando como as modalidades institucionais de violência se inter-relacionam. Uma leitura que empurra a análise interseccional para além da denúncia e em direção à transformação estrutural.
Sandra Saleiro, Nelson Ramalho, Mafalda de Menezes e Jorge Gato, Estudo Nacional sobre Necessidades das Pessoas LGBTI e sobre a Discriminação em Razão da Orientação Sexual, Identidade e Expressão de Género e Características Sexuais (2022). O estudo mais abrangente sobre discriminação LGBT+ em Portugal. Os dados mostram de forma inequívoca a dimensão interseccional das desigualdades — e a distância entre a igualdade formal que a lei promete e a exclusão material que as instituições continuam a produzir. Leitura indispensável, e mais pertinente do que nunca num momento em que essa igualdade formal está ela própria sob ataque.
Anthony Vincent, Peau noire, masque arc-en-ciel, in Florent Manelli (org.), Pédés (2023). O testemunho que atravessa os dois últimos textos deste caderno e que serve de âncora para o argumento onto-epistemológico do texto 5. Uma obra que toma a sério a experiência vivida como matéria política e teórica — e que recusa a separação entre o pessoal e o estrutural. Vincent não é um caso de estudo. É um sujeito epistémico.
Frantz Fanon, Peau noire, masques blancs (1952). O texto fundador da análise da colonialidade como inscrição na pele e como produção de um sujeito que aprende a ver-se através do olhar do colonizador. Vincent dialoga deliberadamente com Fanon ao substituir a máscara branca pela máscara arco-íris — atualizando a genealogia fanoniana para o campo da sexualidade e da vigilância policial contemporânea.
#cuir #kuir #bibliografia #leituras #masculinidades #intersecionalidade #ontoepistemologia #teoria #desdeasmargens #caderno2
from
Roscoe's Quick Notes

Tonight my WNBA Indiana Fever are scheduled to play the Washington Mystics at 6:00 PM CDT, and I plan to follow this game. I've not yet decided whether to watch the game on Peacock TV or follow the radio call on WIBC. But whichever I choose, I do intend to follow this game.
And the adventure continues.