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Notes I Won’t Reread
I slept well last night, and i wont provide any details in that matter because i said so. i haven’t slept well in a while, long enough that i forgot the last time i ever did. I struggle and im using struggle lossly gossy here, with sleeping the first night in new places that aren’t my house, or haven’t been cleaned by me. you can call me a germaphobe if that’ll help you sleep at night, but id rather stay in my room for years than sit next to some sick, coughing goblin because im afraid whatever they’re launching into the air will become part of the oxygen i breathe, and that disgusts me. enough that i’d need to step outside just to get that awful, awful human breath away from me, if you do not understand, then oh well. who am i to judge an innocent human soul that'll happily inhale whatever complete stranger just launched into the air five seconds ago? Thats Admirable. I hope you both enjoy sharing lungs. I'm not a germaphobe. I just have an overwhelming hatred for humans and their relentless insistence on existing quite close to me, but anyway, I cleaned the place, like im resetting it just to make it tolerable. Not because im obsessed with cleanliness, Mr. “dont keep humans around him” Thats me, I just cant stand the idea that other people have been there, exisiting too loudly and too close, at least what seem to be cleaned havent been cleaned enough to make me completely calm. after that, i just sat with my own, and i enjoy it, no one trying to turn breathing into a group activity. And it’s quieter this way. away from the noise, away from troubles. if im being honest, I probably forgot my little mental pills somewhere along the way too, or i was just too irritated with humans that i forgot it somewhere here or there, but i still function just fine. if you ignore the fact that i function best when the world stops insisting i participate in it.
Thats all, i have nothing else for today.
Sincerely, Unpaid Human Critic
Anonymous
Percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) has evolved significantly over the past two decades, enabling physicians to treat increasingly complex coronary lesions with greater precision and predictability. However, certain lesion subsets continue to present unique challenges despite advances in stent technology. Among these, coronary bifurcation lesions and in-stent restenosis (ISR) remain two of the most demanding scenarios in contemporary interventional cardiology.
As clinicians seek strategies that balance procedural success with long-term vessel preservation, the role of the drug coated balloon has gained considerable attention. Unlike conventional stent-based approaches, drug-coated balloons deliver antiproliferative therapy directly to the vessel wall without leaving behind a permanent implant. This characteristic has made them particularly relevant in situations where additional metal layers may complicate future treatment options.
Today, the growing use of DCB technology in complex PCI reflects a broader multidisciplinary effort involving interventional cardiologists, imaging specialists, vascular experts, and clinical researchers working toward more individualized treatment strategies.
While drug-eluting stents remain the foundation of modern coronary intervention, not every lesion is ideally suited for repeat stenting.
Complex lesions often involve:
In these situations, additional stent implantation may increase procedural complexity and potentially affect future treatment flexibility.
This has encouraged clinicians to explore therapies that can provide effective restenosis control while minimizing the long-term burden of permanent implants.
The drug coated balloon has emerged as one such option.
A DCB combines conventional balloon angioplasty with localized drug delivery.
During balloon inflation, an antiproliferative drug—most commonly paclitaxel—is transferred directly to the vessel wall. Once drug delivery is complete, the balloon is removed, leaving no scaffold, polymer, or implant behind.
This “leave nothing behind” approach offers several potential advantages:
These characteristics have made DCB therapy particularly valuable in ISR management and increasingly relevant in selected bifurcation interventions.
In-stent restenosis occurs when tissue growth causes re-narrowing within a previously implanted stent.
Although modern drug-eluting stents have significantly reduced restenosis rates, ISR continues to occur in clinical practice due to factors such as:
Historically, repeat stenting was a common treatment strategy. However, placing additional stent layers inside an already treated segment can create new procedural challenges.
DCB therapy offers an alternative by delivering medication without adding another permanent implant.
Potential benefits include:
Clinical trials such as PEPCAD II and ISAR-DESIRE 3 have demonstrated favorable outcomes for DCB therapy in ISR, helping establish its role in contemporary restenosis management.
Bifurcation lesions involve narrowing at or near a vessel branch point.
These lesions remain technically challenging because intervention must account for:
Stenting across a bifurcation can sometimes complicate side branch access and increase procedural complexity.
In selected bifurcation strategies, DCBs may be used to treat side branches after lesion preparation and balloon angioplasty.
Potential advantages include:
Although patient selection remains important, DCB-based approaches are increasingly being explored as part of lesion-specific treatment planning in bifurcation PCI.
Modern PCI increasingly relies on collaboration among multiple clinical specialties.
Successful DCB-based intervention often involves input from:
Each group contributes valuable insights regarding:
This multidisciplinary approach is particularly important in complex lesions where treatment decisions must balance immediate procedural success with future therapeutic flexibility.
Advanced imaging technologies have become essential tools when evaluating complex coronary disease.
Techniques such as:
help physicians:
Imaging is especially important before DCB therapy because optimal outcomes depend heavily on adequate lesion preparation and vessel expansion.
Unlike stent implantation, DCB therapy relies entirely on effective drug transfer to the vessel wall.
For this reason, lesion preparation plays a critical role.
Key objectives include:
Many experts view lesion preparation as one of the most important determinants of successful DCB treatment.
When performed correctly, it helps maximize therapeutic benefit and supports favorable long-term outcomes.
As evidence supporting DCB therapy continues to expand, innovation within the field has accelerated.
Several drug eluting balloon companies are investing in:
The focus is increasingly shifting toward optimizing both procedural performance and long-term vessel healing.
This ongoing innovation reflects the broader trend toward more personalized and lesion-specific treatment strategies in interventional cardiology.
Among the organizations contributing to this evolving field, Translumina has developed technologies that align with contemporary approaches to vessel restoration and restenosis management.
Its portfolio includes drug-coated balloon solutions designed to support localized drug delivery without leaving a permanent implant behind. These technologies reflect the growing clinical interest in treatment strategies that prioritize vessel preservation while maintaining procedural effectiveness.
As the adoption of DCB therapy continues to expand, companies such as Translumina play a role in supporting innovation through device development, clinical engagement, and ongoing advancements in interventional cardiology.
The role of DCB therapy is expected to continue evolving as additional clinical evidence becomes available.
Future areas of focus include:
As clinicians increasingly move toward vessel-preserving approaches, DCBs are likely to remain an important component of the interventional toolkit.
Bifurcation lesions and in-stent restenosis continue to represent some of the most challenging scenarios in modern PCI. In these complex settings, the drug coated balloon offers a unique therapeutic option by delivering targeted drug therapy without introducing additional permanent implants.
Supported by growing clinical evidence and ongoing innovation from leading drug eluting balloon companies, DCB technology has established an important role in selected coronary interventions. Its ability to support vessel preservation, reduce metal burden, and maintain future treatment flexibility makes it an increasingly valuable tool in contemporary interventional practice.
As multidisciplinary collaboration, imaging-guided intervention, and lesion-specific treatment planning continue to advance, drug-coated balloons are well positioned to play an even greater role in the future of complex PCI.
from
Unattributed
If you look up Neo-Luddite or Neo-Luddism in Wikipedia, Chellis Glendinning, who is considered to be one of the major influencers of the movement, wrote in her paper Notes towards a Neo-Luddite manifesto that Neo-Luddites are:
20th century citizens—activists, workers, neighbors, social critics, and scholars—who question the predominant modern worldview, which preaches that unbridled technology represents progress.
And, looking at the hobbies I am most interested in shows that at least half of them are rooted in more heritage ideas:
It could even be argued that my interest in Photography also fits in with the concept of Neo-Luddism. However, given that modern photography is highly dependent on current technologies, I don't count it.
But, just looking at my hobbies isn't a reflection of my thoughts in this area. While I absolutely agree with the sentiment that we should question the concept that unbridled technology represents progress, I cannot align myself with a number of other movements that appear to be related to neo-Luddism. Some of those are the anti-globalization movement, and the anarcho-primitivism movements.
Then what do I consider myself? I came up with a different term to describe my relationship with technology over a decade ago: Techno Curmudgeon. Basically, a curmudgeon is similar to a misanthrope, a person who distrusts other people and human nature. However, instead I have a distrust of technology. I maintain that a lot of the changes that we have seen over the last two decades have really been more change for the sake of change, instead of change with specific goals to improve technology for people.
This mistrust of technology is rooted in the many, many cases of the abuse of technology that we have seen. If I were to say there was any single story that made me into a Techno Curmudgeon it would be the story: How Target Figured Out A Teen Girl Was Pregnant Before Her Father Did. (Note: the original story was in the New York Times, but it is heavily sourced in the Forbes version).
The fact is, that was, in my book a severe invasion of privacy. This is on the order of the Police or a government body requiring that your Library book records be made available to them. I also consider this on the order of an Insurance Companies building a profile on you so they can deny your claim because of something ridiculous.
This can be extended to more recent things that we have seen. For example, the Mozilla Foundation deciding to become an advertising company. Just because they lack imagination needed to stick to their original principles while raising the capital they need, all of a sudden you become the product for them to sell.
In the end, the concept of becoming a Techno Curmudgeon (a term I would love to spread even further) means that I don't accept technology for technology's sake. I maintain a healthy skepticism which is reflected in my hobbies. All of them are about minimizing my interactions with computers and the online world. Instead, I make use of technology to disconnect from technology (like using my E-reader to get away from the computer). Something else that isn't reflected in this list: I minimize the number of subscriptions I have. I don't have Spotify, Netflix, or other streaming services.
This isn't to say I am completely able to avoid harmful technology. For example, given where I live, I am stuck using Amazon. They are the only company that can reliably (most of the time) deliver things that I need. However, when possible, I avoid technology that has proven itself to be harmful, or technology that hasn't proven there is a need for it to change.

This is more of an overall reflection on my baal teshuva yeshiva period in Jerusalem (2007-2010). So that it is still recorded somewhere online:
I am happy that I left Judaism because of many different reasons; socially, intellectually, theologically, and physically. However, I do look positively back at the times where we as young adults had some great times at yeshiva Ohr Somayach. Yes, the food was really bad and the dorms were horrendous, but it was a way to connect to so many different people from all around the world while learning more about THEIR Charedi Judaism. A bunch of us never fitted in and we were never going to fit in. I have many negative stories about how Ohr Somayach in Jerusalem was actively pushing people to become Charedi instead of merely “good Jews”. But I won't discuss that here. I am so happy that I didn't go out on shidduchim while in yeshiva because almost all of the people I knew back than who did get married at a young age did also get divorced very quickly. It felt like a trap: You go into Ohr Somayach > become more frum > try to find someone “on your level” > have kids > live in Israel for X amount of years > and then ........ depending on the specific outcome/situation they would often have a very difficult life. With the latter I mean working working multiple jobs in Israel, or a 50-60 hour work week just to make ends meet.
Anyway, That was a long time ago because its 2026 already , Now I have a decent job, finished a good university, acquired different professional skills while still improving them. Focusing on Python, Excel, learning a different language. SQL, Linux. I really enjoy it all. Sometimes I still miss my “brothers in arms” who I studied with during the day, and partied with at night. We had some great Thursday evenings in town. Sometimes I miss being able to discuss Judaism with friends because I do still find it interesting. And no I cant discuss that with my current friends/acquaintances because non of them are Jewish.
I think we were part of the last “Baal Teshuva movement” era. There was still money for trips to the Golan Heights and Tsfat (Safed) including staying over at a hotel. I experienced the 2007-2010 years in retrospect as the final “golden Baal Teshuva movement years” before internet became more easily available on your smartphone. Don't get me wrong, we where trying to pick up free WiFi connection in the neighborhood and surprisingly the password was often “Admin”. At one point i managed to download so many secular books on my laptop that I was having my own curriculum during the break.
I know that Ohr Somayach changed a lot. they removed the courtyard where we used to sit underneath the fig tree. And they are catering towards high income families. this makes sense financially because back in 2007-2010 Ohr Somayach was in a financial crisis because of how much money they were spending. However, I guess they always managed to be somewhat successful at fund raising in the US. Otherwise, we could never have such amazing trips and events.
Times change I wonder if classical kiruv will still be a thing in 10 years from now. What I do know is that the younger generations have easy access to knowledge. therefore, my advice is the following to the upcoming yeshiva generation:
1# Remain critical and verify sources. 2# Look for academy sources and theories on the topic as well. 3# NEVER take a sabbatical from University to join a yeshiva. (Chances are high that you will stay longer) 4# Do not go to yeshiva after age 25. (Your focus should be towards your future > study/work) 5# Never cut your secular family and friends out of your life. 6# Set goal/s what you want to achieve in X amount of time.
from
Littoral
je suis l'enfant des rues ténébreuses grandir est plus grand que mes espérances il m'arrive de parler à mes fantômes
imprévisible beauté printemps vagabond à piétiner les roses j'ai peur de l'azur
je m'appelle décolonial éloigne-toi de mes rives éloigne-toi de mes sept voiliers j'ai souvenance j'ai souvenance masque somptueux l'histoire m'appelle à contre-jour
— Rodney Saint-Éloi, Nous ne trahirons pas le poème, p. 33
from Lastige Gevallen in de Rede
Zullen we haat en nijdje spelen we zitten elkaar toch maar te vervelen dan hebben we iets beters te doen lezen en schrijven tussen de regels van het goed fatsoen dan verwijt ik jou meer dan iets en jij mij heel wat en vallen we langzaam maar zeker ongezellig samen in een diep en donker gat daar gaan we dan mee door tot het onverbiddelijke end ik zeg dat jij je gedraagt als een idioot, jij zegt dat ik er één ben zo gaan we door tot we elkaar echt niet kunnen luchten of zien we schreeuwen 'wat heb ik ooit misdaan dat ik jou als mijn noodlot heb verdiend' dan timmer ik er op los en jij ontvangt de klappen en dan ga jij uiteindelijk opstappen en dan krijg ik spijt zit vol zelfverwijt want ik ben je kwijt en ondanks dat kom je niet terug je bent zeker niet voor niets gevlucht en dan zoek ik mijn heil in de drank wentel me in de smerige stank van echte en van junkie verdriet maar zorg dat niemand mij buiten mijn eigen alco hol me zo bezopen ziet tot het punt van geen terugkeer is bereikt en iedereen ziet hoe ik mezelf in de dranksuper onderzeik lijkt je dat wat schat of zal ik de tv aanzetten en irritant langs alle kanalen zappen?
from Lastige Gevallen in de Rede
Ik heb momenteel heel veel last van voorkennis ik ken alles al ver voor het er echt is zo is het eigenlijk altijd geweest ruim voor de uitnodiging ben ik op het feest het is inmiddels een flink probleem Ik vraag de huidarts om zalf maar die ziet niet wat ik weet wat zal intreden, akelig jeukend eczeem voorkennis is een vreselijk ongeluk ook al hou ik spullen stevig vast ze gaan toch stuk ik zie ellende maanden voor het zover is opdagen, en ken de meeste antwoorden veel eerder dan de vragen terwijl er iets op peil is hoor ik het zich al verlagen zie ze vallen in kuilen voor zichzelf of anderen gegraven ik weet waar en wanneer het mis gaat terwijl ik nog bezig ben om me netjes te gedragen ik kan zonder twijfel elke huid verkopen nog voor het leren jasje is afgeschoten alle loterijen op aard hoeven hier nooit te adverteren voor hun overdosis levensloten jaren geleden zag ik al dat ze alleen de hoop op beter leven verkopen ik ben al op mijn bestemming voor ik er naar toe ga fietsen of lopen nog voor ik mijn moede hoofd er op leg zie ik het verschil al tussen een puntige rots en een kussen voor er iets van wrevel tussen de partijen is ontstaan loop ik al te zussen het is zo vervelend om vooraf alles te weten gelukkig zal ik deze narigheid op donderdag om vijf uur veertien zijn vergeten.
from Lastige Gevallen in de Rede
Wat maak je me nou?! Een extra donker kelder lokaal voor bijscholen van de onderbouw en een fraaie scheidingsjurk voor je derde of is t al je vierde ex vrouw dat en heel veel roekeloos leven tegen wild woekerende rouw En ik overweeg nog het een en ander voor morgen misschien een robot voor het mogelijk maken van betere dus duurdere zorgen ruimte voor de schatkamer waarin verpakkingsmateriaal kan worden opgeborgen en een plekje in huis waar je even ongestoord lang en breed kan instorten dat is zo'n beetje het plan want dat komt er nou van als je mij mijn gang laat gaan dan draag ik dag in dag uit dag aan zinvol bij aan ieders vreselijk ingewikkeld bestaan.
from
EpicMind

Freundinnen & Freunde der Weisheit! Wer morgens gleich zum Smartphone greift und durch soziale Feeds scrollt, startet den Tag im Reaktionsmodus. Die eigene Aufmerksamkeit richtet sich auf fremde Inhalte, fremde Prioritäten, fremde Stimmen. Die eigene Kreativität kommt dabei zu kurz.
Was dabei zu kurz kommt, ist das kreative Potenzial, das gerade in den frühen Stunden besonders hoch ist – und das entscheidend sein kann für ein produktives Arbeiten.
Ein einfacher, aber wirksamer Perspektivenwechsel besteht darin, den Tag mit einem kurzen kreativen Impuls zu beginnen: schreiben, skizzieren, notieren, entwerfen. Es geht nicht um Perfektion, sondern um den Aufbau von Eigenimpulsen. Wer zuerst erschafft, bevor er konsumiert, aktiviert nicht nur seine Gestaltungsfähigkeit, sondern schützt auch die geistige Klarheit vor der Zersplitterung durch Input-Überflutung. Die ersten 15 bis 20 Minuten eines Arbeitstages reichen oft aus, um eigene Gedanken in Gang zu bringen – bevor die Welt anklopft.
Der Nutzen dieser Gewohnheit liegt in ihrer mehrfachen Wirkung: Sie schafft frühe Erfolgserlebnisse, erhält die Konzentration für anspruchsvolle Aufgaben und stärkt die Selbstbestimmung im Umgang mit der eigenen Zeit. Das bedeutet nicht, sich komplett von Nachrichten und Netzwerken abzuschotten – sondern die Reihenfolge bewusst zu gestalten. Wer zuerst erschafft, steuert den eigenen Arbeitstag aus einer Position der Klarheit und Kontrolle.
Produktivität entsteht nicht durch permanente Verfügbarkeit oder maximale Effizienz. Sie beginnt mit der Fähigkeit, den eigenen Denkraum gegen zu frühe Überreizung zu verteidigen. Wer sich morgens ein kurzes Zeitfenster reserviert, in dem ausschliesslich eigene Ideen zählen, schafft die Voraussetzung für echten Fokus – und vielleicht auch für das, was später Resonanz erzeugt.
„Intelligente Fehler zu machen, ist eine grosse Kunst.“ – Federico Fellini (1920–1993)
Unser Gehirn kann sich nicht alles merken. Schreibe Gedanken, Ideen oder Aufgaben sofort auf, damit Du sie nicht vergisst und Dein Kopf frei für Wichtiges bleibt.
Ich stehe kurz vor meinem fünfzigsten Geburtstag. Eine Zahl, die nüchtern betrachtet nichts anderes bedeutet, als ein weiteres volles Lebensjahrzehnt. Und doch lädt sie zum Innehalten ein. Dabei drängt sich mir eine Beobachtung auf, die ich lange mit einem gewissen Unbehagen betrachtet habe: Ich bin heute öfter alleine als früher. Nicht immer, nicht ausschliesslich – aber doch merklich häufiger. Und noch vor einigen Jahren hätte ich das für ein Warnsignal gehalten. Einsamkeit, so heisst es, sei die neue Volkskrankheit. Rückzug wird rasch mit Mangel gleichgesetzt. Doch je länger ich darüber nachdenke, desto weniger überzeugt mich diese Gleichung.
Vielen Dank, dass Du Dir die Zeit genommen hast, diesen Newsletter zu lesen. Ich hoffe, die Inhalte konnten Dich inspirieren und Dir wertvolle Impulse für Dein (digitales) Leben geben. Bleib neugierig und hinterfrage, was Dir begegnet!
EpicMind – Weisheiten für das digitale Leben „EpicMind“ (kurz für „Epicurean Mindset“) ist mein Blog und Newsletter, der sich den Themen Lernen, Produktivität, Selbstmanagement und Technologie widmet – alles gewürzt mit einer Prise Philosophie.
Disclaimer Teile dieses Texts wurden mit Deepl Write (Korrektorat und Lektorat) überarbeitet. Für die Recherche in den erwähnten Werken/Quellen und in meinen Notizen wurde NotebookLM von Google verwendet. Das Artikel-Bild wurde mit ChatGPT erstellt und anschliessend nachbearbeitet.
Topic #Newsletter
from An Open Letter
One thing I’ve been thinking about after talking with N Was how my Hinge profile could likely benefit from some sort of faith thirst trap or photo that shows off my physique. I feel like I’ve gotten a lot of mixed feedback on this, but most of it involves tastefully showing off your body. I feel like my profile lacks that right now, and it feels weird to try to figure out a socially acceptable way to show off.
Anonymous
Top 10 High-Paying AI Skills That Companies Want in 2026
Artificial Intelligence is no longer limited to research labs and tech giants. Today, AI is transforming industries such as healthcare, finance, education, e-commerce, manufacturing, and recruitment. As businesses continue investing in automation and intelligent technologies, the demand for skilled AI professionals is rising rapidly.
According to industry trends, companies are actively looking for candidates with specialized AI expertise rather than general technical knowledge. Whether you are a student, job seeker, or working professional, learning the right AI skills can help you access better career opportunities and higher-paying roles.
In this guide, we explore the top 10 high-paying AI skills that companies want in 2026 and how they can help you build a successful future-ready career. Why AI Skills Are in High Demand Organizations are adopting AI to improve efficiency, automate repetitive tasks, analyze large datasets, and enhance customer experiences. This shift has created strong demand for professionals who can develop, manage, and optimize AI-powered systems.
Employers searching through an AI job portal often prioritize candidates who possess practical AI skills alongside problem-solving and analytical abilities. As a result, professionals with specialized AI expertise frequently command higher salaries and faster career growth.
Machine Learning continues to be one of the highest-paying specializations listed on many AI job portal platforms.
Key applications include: AI-powered chatbots Content generation Marketing automation Virtual assistants Code generation Companies are increasingly hiring candidates with Generative AI skills to improve productivity and innovation.
Natural Language Processing (NLP) – Natural Language Processing enables machines to understand, interpret, and generate human language. NLP is widely used in: Voice assistants Sentiment analysis Chatbots Translation tools Search engines As businesses focus on improving customer experiences through conversational AI, professionals with NLP expertise can access lucrative career opportunities.
Data Science and Analytics – AI systems rely heavily on high-quality data. This makes Data Science one of the most valuable skills in the AI ecosystem. Data scientists help organizations: Analyze business trends Build predictive models Generate insights Improve decision-making Professionals who combine AI knowledge with data analytics are often preferred by employers using an AI recruitment platform to identify top talent.
Prompt Engineering – Prompt Engineering has emerged as a specialized skill in the age of Generative AI. Prompt engineers create structured instructions that help AI models generate accurate and useful responses. This skill is becoming increasingly important for: Content creation Customer support automation Research assistance AI workflow optimization Many organizations now consider prompt engineering an essential component of modern AI operations.
Computer Vision – Computer Vision allows machines to understand and interpret visual information from images and videos. Industries using computer vision include: Healthcare Manufacturing Retail Security Automotive Popular applications include facial recognition, quality inspection, medical imaging, and autonomous systems. As visual AI technologies continue evolving, demand for computer vision experts is expected to grow significantly in 2026.
AI Automation and Workflow Design – Businesses are increasingly using AI to automate repetitive processes and improve operational efficiency. Professionals skilled in AI automation can help organizations: Automate customer interactions Streamline workflows Reduce operational costs Improve productivity Knowledge of workflow automation tools and AI integrations can make candidates highly valuable in today's competitive job market.
AI Product Management – Not every high-paying AI role requires advanced coding expertise. AI Product Managers bridge the gap between technical teams and business stakeholders. They oversee the development, implementation, and success of AI-powered products. Key responsibilities include: Defining product strategy Understanding customer needs Managing AI projects Coordinating development teams This role is ideal for professionals with leadership and business management skills.
AI Cybersecurity As AI adoption grows, so do security concerns. Organizations require professionals who can protect AI systems from threats and vulnerabilities. AI cybersecurity specialists focus on: Threat detection Security monitoring Risk assessment Data protection Companies handling sensitive customer information are increasingly investing in AI-powered security solutions.
AI Cloud Computing – Modern AI applications rely on cloud infrastructure for scalability and performance. Professionals with expertise in cloud-based AI solutions can help organizations deploy and manage AI systems efficiently. Popular areas include: AI deployment Cloud architecture Model hosting AI infrastructure management Combining AI knowledge with cloud computing expertise often leads to some of the highest-paying positions in the technology sector.
How to Start Learning AI Skills in 2026
If you are new to AI, focus on building a strong foundation before specializing. A practical learning path includes: Learn Python fundamentals. Understand data analysis concepts. Explore Machine Learning basics. Study Generative AI applications. Build real-world projects. Create an impressive portfolio. Practice technical interviews. Apply through a trusted AI job portal. Employers increasingly value practical experience, so showcasing projects and certifications can significantly improve your chances of landing AI-related roles.
Future Career Opportunities in AI The AI industry is expected to create millions of new jobs over the next decade. Some of the most promising career options include: AI Engineer Machine Learning Engineer Prompt Engineer Data Scientist AI Product Manager AI Research Scientist NLP Specialist Computer Vision Engineer AI Consultant AI Automation Specialist Many companies now use intelligent hiring systems and specialized AI recruitment platform solutions to identify skilled professionals quickly.
Conclusion – The future of work is increasingly shaped by artificial intelligence. Learning the right high-paying AI skills can help you stay competitive, increase earning potential, and access exciting career opportunities across industries. Whether you choose Machine Learning, Generative AI, NLP, Computer Vision, or AI Automation, investing in AI education today can create long-term career advantages. As demand for AI talent continues to rise, professionals who continuously upgrade their skills will be best positioned to succeed in 2026 and beyond. If you're planning your next career move, building expertise in these AI domains and exploring opportunities through a reliable AI job portal can be an excellent starting point toward a future-ready profession.
from What Inspired Me
Ground-crawling heavy bass, brain-hacking intricate glitches, and tender yet frantic build-ups. In 2013, Jon Hopkins' Open Eye Signal literally shattered club floors worldwide, dragging him into a grueling world tour of over 165 shows.
However, skip ahead 11 years. In 2024, what he is playing is not a heavy four-on-the-floor kick, but strings that gently melt into the silence of space—music for a NASA space exhibition, and a time capsule sent to the lunar surface.
Why did he abandon the frenzy of the floor and head for the “altar of silence”? Behind this transformation lay an inevitable drama brought about by burnout, spiritual exploration, and a certain commissioned work.
Jon Hopkins was born in London. Showing musical talent from an early age, he attended the Saturday program at the Royal College of Music at age 16. There, he entered a concerto competition playing Ravel’s Piano Concerto in G major, and won.
Ironically, however, that experience distanced him from the world of classical piano.
“I had never been so nervous in my life as I was for that big concert. I realized I didn't need to feel that way.”
He reflected in a later interview, noting that he stopped performing in classical concerts afterward. Instead, he turned to electronic music at 17—bringing the musical foundation cultivated through five years of piano training into the introspective space of the studio.
This episode from his youth might be directly connected to the exhaustion he later felt when performing massive live sets in front of 20,000 people at Glastonbury. While he hasn't explicitly linked the two, it suggests an early sensitivity to the nervous strain of performing before large audiences.
Ironically, by escaping to the electronic music world to avoid public performance, he found himself once again standing in front of massive crowds. At least in the early stages of touring, though, this was a voluntary choice, not a mandate. Looking back, he noted, “Immunity changed my career. I jumped from 500-capacity venues to 5,000 all at once,” adding that after finishing a record, he was “happy to go around the world playing it.” Furthermore, he described his label, Domino, as one that “happily allows artists to take as much time as they want and never rushes them,” indicating no external pressure. As a result of being drawn into the gravity of his own success, he ended up taking on the same kind of exhaustion he once experienced in classical concerts—only on a vastly larger scale.
Sublimating his Royal College of Music piano techniques into the grammar of electronic music, and following collaborations with Brian Eno and Coldplay, film scoring, and a joint work with King Creosote (Diamond Mine, Mercury Prize-nominated), Hopkins released his fourth album, Immunity, in 2013.
The track Open Eye Signal is an 8-minute epic, with the main riff alone taking four months to craft using a 1979 Korg MS-20. The pleasure of its meticulous build-up and release achieved a high-dimensional balance between club music functionality and IDM experimentation.
The album Immunity was nominated for a Mercury Prize and later selected in Pitchfork's “50 Best IDM Albums of All Time,” solidifying its reputation as an electronica masterpiece. Mixmag praised it as “an album of organic techno and exquisite mini-symphonies.” The latter half of the album features ambient-leaning tracks, showing that the pendulum swing from rhythm to silence was already at the core of his musical identity.
However, this success came at a heavy price.
In terms of musical operation, the Immunity tour live sets were primarily DJ-style, controlling tracks in real-time using devices like Kaoss Pads. The scale and production of the show, however, were entirely different. Combined with an immersive, massive production featuring a team of LED hula-hoop performers, massive projections, strobes, and lasers, he reached the point of headlining the Park Stage at Glastonbury in front of 20,000 people.
Moreover, the album production itself had already drained him. Hopkins recalled on his website, “By the time I finished making Immunity, I was pretty burnt out musically.” On top of that came a tour of over 165 shows.
The core of his exhaustion wasn't the technical burden of playing, but the destruction of his biological rhythm—constantly releasing maximum adrenaline in clubs and festivals late at night, compounded by endless jet lag.
“Between putting out maximum adrenaline in the middle of the night and constant jet lag, I lost the ability to rest properly,” he stated.
It’s hard to deny that the nervous strain of large-scale performances he experienced at his 16-year-old competition had compounded once again on the 20,000-capacity stages.
Faced with this exhaustion, Hopkins spoke to Billboard magazine: “The exhaustion reached its limit. I felt I couldn't go on like this, and threw myself deeply into Transcendental Meditation ™ for a month.”
Before this, he had practiced Kundalini meditation (a yoga-derived technique combining breathing, mantras, and poses to induce altered states) and self-hypnosis (inducing deep relaxation, which he used to ease touring tension). However, triggered by the drain of the Immunity tour, he transitioned to TM, making it a daily routine.
What is Transcendental Meditation ™? A technique where one silently repeats a mantra to quiet the mind and naturally enter a state of deep rest. Unlike the previous two techniques, it involves no physical movement or breath control and can simply be done sitting in a chair. It requires learning from a certified instructor.
Then, at the age of 35, backed by years of meditation practice, he experienced DMT for the first time.
What is DMT (Dimethyltryptamine)? A powerful natural hallucinogen found in plants and the main active compound in Ayahuasca. Within a short 10-minute trip, it is said to bring profound transformations unattainable by normal consciousness, often described as “the most intense psychedelic experience.”
“That experience changed everything,” he reflects. “As I repeatedly experienced expanded states of consciousness, it was only natural that the destination of my music would change.”
Let's pause here to touch upon Hopkins' creative style itself.
Across multiple interviews, he has consistently stated:
“I plan nothing. I intuitively follow a single thread, and only realize what the song is about after the fact.” “There was a strange intelligence behind the process that didn't feel like it came from me.” “When I listen back to things I made years ago, I surprise myself, wondering what that sound is. Most of the sounds I can't explain how they came to exist.”
This creative style is deeply connected to the act of setting the conscious ego aside through meditation or DMT to draw music from the subconscious. Regarding TM, he noted it is “very helpful for drawing out ideas drifting deep in the subconscious.”
Here, the name of a certain painter comes to mind: the Swedish artist Hilma af Klint (1862–1944). After experiencing spiritual visions during séances in 1906, she began painting abstract works, predating Kandinsky as a pioneer of abstract art. Creating works under the belief that she was “commissioned to paint by higher entities,” her sensation of receiving something beyond the conscious ego strongly resonates with Hopkins' narrative.
Of course, the frameworks are completely different between af Klint, who believed in spiritual channeling, and Hopkins, who discusses the subconscious within the contexts of meditation and neuroscience. Yet, the structural experience of “when conscious planning is let go, something seemingly from the outside guides the work” is strikingly similar.
When tracing Hopkins' evolution, it’s difficult to deny the possibility that this wasn't merely a shift in musical direction, but an inevitable outcome of a highly suggestible individual deepening his access to the subconscious through meditation and psychedelics.
Official Website of the Hilma af Klint Foundation
Emerging from this period of introspection was his fifth album, Singularity (2018). Incorporating tracks featuring choirs, it further deepened the rhythm-to-silence pendulum swing already evident in Immunity, now framed within a more psychedelic context. Rather than a definitive departure, it can be heard as an extension of Immunity with intensified introspection. Hopkins describes the album's structure as mirroring the arc of a psychedelic experience—from chaos to clarity.
“I made this album to be listened to in its entirety. It’s a resistance to the streaming era's habit of immediately skipping to the next song.”
Nominated for a Grammy, the album cracked the UK Top 10, dragging him once again into a tour of hundreds of shows. By late 2019, sleep deprivation and exhaustion reached their limits once more. “If it weren't for COVID, I might have kept going a bit longer. But I felt like the universe took me by the hand,” he said.
Considering the dancefloor fanbase that followed him up to Singularity, his next two albums represented a kind of farewell. Hopkins completely abandoned beats, steering toward pure ambient works. The chart numbers honestly reflected the cost of this shift—but Hopkins himself didn't care. True to his words, “I made it without thinking about commercial success at all,” the success of Immunity and its aftermath had already afforded him the financial and mental freedom to create exactly the music he desired.
The forced halt of the pandemic, an expedition to the Tayos Caves in Ecuador, and his involvement with high-precision ketamine therapy. These elements converged, leading Hopkins to produce his first entirely drumless album.
Clocking in at over an hour, the album is designed to match the average duration of a ketamine trip, and upon release, it was immediately utilized by therapists and clients in actual psychedelic therapy sessions.
What is Psychedelic Therapy? Unlike the gradual process of letting go of desires in Zen meditation, this is a more rapid, medical approach. Using substances like ketamine or psilocybin (the active compound in magic mushrooms), it induces altered states of consciousness unattainable normally within a short time, aiming to resolve trauma and shift self-awareness. Before release, Hopkins had already designed musical experiences for Imperial College London's psilocybin clinical trials, and this album serves as an extension of that work.
On the UK Album Chart, it peaked at No. 30 and charted for just two weeks, a significant drop compared to Singularity's No. 6. However, beyond the charts, the work was vibrantly alive—receiving so much feedback from therapists and users that Hopkins created a dedicated trip report page on his website.
What is notable here is that eliminating drums was likely more than just a musical choice. The Immunity and Singularity style of meticulously placing sounds over a complex rhythmic grid requires immense time and logical decision-making. By letting go of that and transitioning to ambient focused on sustained notes and drones, the nature of production fundamentally changes—sound is no longer bound by a rhythmic grid but follows the flow of intuition. “I didn't do any conscious planning on this record,” Hopkins reflected. The goal of making music for meditation, the ambient format, and a creative stance of trusting the subconscious—these three elements aligned perfectly for the first time during this period.
Originating as a commissioned piece for Dreamachine in 2022, it evolved by late 2023 into a 41-minute, 8-chapter opus. Beginning with “altar” and quietly concluding with “nothing is lost,” Hopkins intends for it to be experienced as one continuous piece (the 8-track split was a label request). It is a ceremonial masterwork woven with cavernous sub-bass, hypnotic drums, and ascending melodies.
The starting point was a commission for Dreamachine in London—an immersive installation that induces visual hallucinations behind closed eyes using stroboscopic light. In an interview with Ableton, Hopkins noted:
“By its very nature, it had to be quite warm and accessible.”
The constraint of designing an immersive guided experience brought a new warmth to his music, sublimating into RITUAL.
Chart-wise, it peaked at No. 51 in the UK, dropping further than Music for Psychedelic Therapy. Yet, RA Magazine praised it as “masterfully crafted, sharpening the senses and encouraging introspection,” while Under the Radar gave it an 8.5/10. “Commissioned work opens new doors for an artist”—music designed to guide the internal experiences of others through the Dreamachine ultimately elevated into his most deeply personal art.
Following RITUAL, Hopkins' ambient works entered a new phase. Through collaborations with Icelandic post-classical composers, he shifted his affinity from drone and electronic-based introspective ambient toward symphonic, sweeping musical landscapes driven by strings and piano.
Released roughly two months after RITUAL, this single was co-written with Ólafur Arnalds, an Icelandic multi-instrumentalist and composer internationally acclaimed for his delicate fusion of neo-classical and electronics.
This piece was explicitly written for Space for Earth, NASA’s first immersive public exhibition at its Washington D.C. headquarters. It is spatial music designed to evoke the “Overview Effect”—the overwhelming realization of Earth's beauty and fragility experienced by astronauts viewing it from space.
If Music for Psychedelic Therapy and RITUAL were ambient works grounded in drones, Forever Held takes a step further. Arnalds' rich string arrangements expand entirely, evoking a majestic image with a cosmic scale and warm embrace. Maintaining ambient silence while offering emotional release through full orchestral resonance, this track stands as one of the defining masterpieces of his ambient career.
The waveform data of this song was engraved onto a NanoFiche disk and will be permanently preserved on the lunar surface as part of NASA's Artemis program.
Interestingly, we see the recurrence of his connection with Coldplay. In 2008, Hopkins played an original track for Chris Martin during the Viva la Vida sessions. That track, “Light Through the Veins,” was adopted as the intro for “Life in Technicolor,” setting the stage for Coldplay's defining album. Sixteen years later in 2024, Forever Held opens Coldplay's album Moon Music. Hopkins' career has repeatedly been mirrored in the massive pop lens of Coldplay at crucial turning points. If the 2008 track was the fresh ambient of an electronica up-and-comer, the 2024 track is the cosmic-scale silence achieved after undergoing burnouts, meditation, psychedelic experiences, and profound commissioned works.
His journey of transformation continues to cross paths with new external contexts in 2026, marking his participation in the soundtrack for the documentary film Wilding. The film chronicles the 18-year “rewilding” project to restore natural ecosystems to a ruined farm in Sussex, UK.
While Hopkins is credited as the main co-producer, this isn't a full-fledged solo album but a joint project with Icelandic film composer Biggi Hilmars. The 13-track (31-minute) compilation includes many solo tracks by Hilmars, indicating Hopkins' involvement is partial. Moreover, the reuse of material from the 2013 Immunity era—such as track 4, “New Land”—reveals this work as an extension of his commissioned (film scoring) repertoire.
Musically, the division of labor is clear: Hopkins handles electronic processing and ethereal synths, while Hilmars predominantly provides dramatic orchestral textures like strings and piano. For the “Wilding Theme,” the lead sound Hopkins used is actually his own voice, heavily processed to sound like an ancient woodwind instrument. This alien electronic acoustic merges with Hilmars' neo-classical majesty, lending a unique depth to the nature documentary's atmosphere.
It can be seen as a work that practically deepens the post-classical affinity he established since Forever Held, channeled through the functional format of film scoring.
Eleven years have passed since the glitches of Open Eye Signal shook dancefloors globally. Today, Jon Hopkins makes music in a place entirely antithetical to floor frenzy.
Yet, tracing his path reveals this wasn't a contradiction, but an inevitability. Burnout called for meditation; meditation opened the door to DMT; psychedelic experiences rewrote the purpose of his music; and commissioned works unlocked new expressive horizons.
“Music is medicine, space, and ritual.” Deepening this conviction, he continues to quietly expand the range of his music—from the dancefloor to the altar, from Earth to the cosmos.
And now, through his collaborations with Icelandic post-classical composers, Hopkins' music is undergoing yet another transformation. How will the introspection cultivated through electronic music grammar merge and deepen with the symphonic majesty woven by strings and piano? Looking back, the aforementioned painter Hilma af Klint also described her work as directly translating images descending from the universe through spiritual rituals. It's highly possible that such an affinity influenced Hopkins' participation in the NASA project. Will he continue to explore the realms of even more deeply autosuggestive inspiration? Only time will tell.
from What Inspired Me
地を這うような重低音、脳をハックするような緻密なグリッチ、 tender して狂気的なビルドアップ。2013年、Jon Hopkinsの『Open Eye Signal』は世界のクラブフロアを文字通り粉砕し、彼を165公演を超える過酷なワールドツアーへと連れ出した。
しかし、それから11年後。2024年の彼が鳴らしているのは、重い4つ打ちのキックではなく、宇宙の静寂と優しく溶け合うストリングス——NASAの宇宙展示のための音楽であり、月面に送られるタイムカプセルだった。
彼はなぜ、フロアの熱狂を捨てて「静寂の祭壇」へと向かったのか?その変容の裏には、燃え尽き、精神的探求、そしてある委託(コミッション)仕事がもたらした必然のドラマがあった。
Jon Hopkinsはロンドン生まれ。幼い頃から音楽的な才能を示し、16歳でロンドンの王立音楽院(Royal College of Music)の土曜プログラムに通う。そこでラヴェルのピアノ協奏曲ト長調を弾いてコンチェルトコンクールに出場し、優勝を果たした。
しかしその体験が、皮肉にも彼をクラシックピアノの世界から遠ざける。
「大きなコンサートで、あんなに緊張したことは人生で一度もなかった。あのように感じる必要はないと思った」
後年のインタビューで振り返っており、その後クラシックの演奏会には出なくなった。代わりに17歳で電子音楽に転向——5年間のピアノ修練で培った音楽的素養を、スタジオという内省的な空間へと持ち込んだ。
この若い頃のエピソードは、のちに2万人を前にしたグラストンベリーでの大規模ライブが彼にもたらした消耗と、どこかで地続きかもしれない。本人がそれを直接結びつけた発言はないが、大勢の聴衆を前にしたパフォーマンスへの神経的な負荷に対して、早い段階から敏感だったことは伺える。
皮肉なことに、人前での演奏から逃れるように向かった電子音楽の世界で、彼は再び大勢の聴衆の前に立つことになる。ただし少なくともツアーの初期においては、それは強制ではなく自発的な選択だった。「Immunityは自分のキャリアを変えた。500キャパの会場から5000キャパへ一気に跳び上がった」と振り返り、制作を終えると「世界中を演奏して回れるのが嬉しい」とも語っている。レーベルのDominoも「アーティストが好きなだけ時間をかけることを喜んで許してくれる、決して急かさない」レーベルだとホプキンス自身が評しており、外部からの圧力があった形跡はない。成功の引力に自ら引き込まれた結果として、かつてクラシックの演奏会で経験したのと同種の消耗を、より巨大なスケールで再び引き受けることになったのだ。
王立音楽院仕込みのピアノ技術を電子音楽の文法に昇華させながら、Brian EnoやColdplayとのコラボレーション、映画音楽、そしてKing Creosoteとの共作『Diamond Mine』(Mercury Prizeノミネート)などを経て、ホプキンスは2013年に4枚目のアルバム『Immunity』をリリースする。
収録曲『Open Eye Signal』は、1979年製Korg MS-20を使って制作されたメインリフだけに4ヶ月を費やした8分間の大作だ。その緻密な構築と解放の快楽は、クラブミュージックとしての機能性と、IDMの実験性を高次元で両立させた。
アルバム『Immunity』はMercury Prizeにノミネートされ、のちにPitchforkの「IDMベストアルバム50」に選出されるなど、エレクトロニカ史に残る傑作として評価されている。Mixmagは「有機的なテクノと精緻なミニ交響曲のアルバム」と称した。アルバム後半にはアンビエント寄りのトラックも収められており、リズムから静寂へという振れ幅はこの時点ですでに彼の音楽的な核心にあった。
しかしこの成功が、彼に大きな代償をもたらす。
Immunityツアーのライブセットは、音楽的な操作という意味では、KaossパッドなどでリアルタイムにトラックをコントロールするDJ的なスタイルが中心だ。しかしショーの規模と演出は別の話だった。LEDフラフープパフォーマーのチーム、巨大プロジェクション、ストロボ、レーザーを組み合わせた没入型の大規模演出とともに、グラストンベリーのパークステージで2万人を前にヘッドライナーを務めるまでになっていた。
加えて、アルバム制作自体もすでに彼を消耗させていた。ホプキンスは「Immunityを作り終えたとき、音楽的にかなり燃え尽きていた」と自身のウェブサイトで振り返っている。そこへ165公演以上のツアーが重なった。
疲弊の本質は演奏技術的な負担ではなく、深夜のクラブやフェスで最大限のアドレナリンを放出し続け、時差を繰り返す生活リズムの破壊にあった。
「夜中に最大限のアドレナリンを出す生活と時差の繰り返しで、適切に休む能力を失ってしまった」
と本人は語っている。16歳のコンクールで経験した大規模なパフォーマンスへの神経的な負荷が、2万人規模のライブで再び積み重なっていた可能性は否定できない。
この疲弊を前に、ホプキンスはBillboard誌のインタビューでこう語っている。「疲弊が極限に達した。このままでは続けられないと感じ、超越瞑想(TM)に1ヶ月間深く取り組んだ」。
それ以前から彼はクンダリーニ瞑想(呼吸法・マントラ・ポーズを組み合わせたヨガ由来の瞑想技法で、意識の変容を促すとされる)やセルフヒプノシス(自己催眠——深いリラクゼーション状態を自ら誘導する技法で、ツアー中の緊張緩和に使っていたという)などを実践していたが、Immunityツアーの消耗をきっかけにTMへと移行し、以後は日課となった。
超越瞑想(TM)とは マントラを心の中で繰り返すことで思考を静め、深い休息状態へと自然に入っていく技法。身体的な動きや呼吸制御を伴わず、椅子に座ったまま行えるシンプルさが特徴で、前述の二つの技法とは異なり、特定の資格を持つ指導者のもとで習得する必要がある。
そして35歳のとき、長年の瞑想実践に裏付けられた準備のもとで、初めてDMTを体験する。
DMT(ジメチルトリプタミン)とは 植物に自然に含まれる強力な幻覚物質で、アヤワスカの主成分でもある。10分ほどの短い体験の中に、通常の意識では到達できないほど深い変容をもたらすとされ、「最も強烈なサイケデリック体験」と称されることが多い。
「あの体験が、すべてを変えた」と彼は振り返る。「意識の拡張状態を何度も経験するうちに、音楽が向かうべき場所が変わっていくのは自然なことだった」。
ここで少し立ち止まって、ホプキンスの創作スタイルそのものについて触れておきたい。
複数のインタビューを通じて、彼は一貫してこう語っている。
「私は何も計画しない。ただ直感的に一本の糸を追いかけていくだけで、曲が何について書かれたものかは後からわかる」 「プロセスの背後に、自分から来たとは思えない奇妙な知性のようなものがあった」 「何年も前に作ったものを聴き直すと、あの音は何だと自分でも驚くことがある。どうやって存在するようになったか説明できない音がほとんどだ」
この制作スタイルは、瞑想やDMTによって意識的な自我を脇に置き、潜在意識から音楽を引き出すという行為と地続きだ。TMについても「潜在意識の深いところに漂うアイデアを引き出すのに非常に役立つ」と語っている。
ここに一人の画家の名前が浮かぶ。スウェーデンの画家ヒルマ・アフ・クリント(Hilma af Klint, 1862–1944)だ。彼女は1906年に交霊会での霊的体験を受けて抽象絵画を描き始め、カンディンスキーより前に抽象絵画の先駆者となったことが近年再評価されている。「高次の存在から絵を描くよう委託された」と信じて制作された彼女の作品は、意識的な自我を超えた何かから受け取るという感覚において、ホプキンスの語り口と共鳴する部分がある。
もちろん、霊的な受信を信じていたアフ・クリントと、瞑想や神経科学的な文脈で潜在意識を語るホプキンスでは、枠組みはまったく異なる。しかし「意識的な計画を手放したとき、自分の外側から来るような何かが作品を導く」という体験の構造は、驚くほど似ている。
ホプキンスの変容を辿るとき、それが単なる音楽的方向転換ではなく、自己暗示的な感受性を持つ人間が、瞑想とサイケデリック体験を通じて潜在意識へのアクセスを深めた結果として起きた必然だったという可能性を、否定することは難しい。
この内省の時期から生まれたのが、5枚目のアルバム『Singularity』(2018)だ。聖歌を取り込んだトラックも交えながら、Immunityですでに示されていたリズムから静寂への振れ幅を、よりサイケデリックな文脈のもとでさらに深めた作品だ。決定的な様式の転換というより、Immunityの延長線上で内省の度合いを増した一枚として聴くことができる。ホプキンスはこのアルバムの構造をサイケデリック体験の弧——混沌から清澄へ——と重ねて語っている。
「アルバムは通しで聴かれるべきものとして作った。ストリーミング時代の、すぐ別の曲に飛ぶ聴き方への抵抗でもある」
GrammyにノミネートされたこのアルバムはUKチャートトップ10に入り、再び彼を数百公演のツアーへと引き込んだ。そして2019年末、睡眠不足と疲弊は再び限界に達する。「コロナがなければもう少し続けていたかもしれない。でも、宇宙に手を引かれた気がした」と本人は語る。
Singularityまでついてきたダンスフロア系のファン層を念頭に置けば、この後の2枚のアルバムはある種の決別だった。ホプキンスはビートを完全に手放し、純粋なアンビエント作品へと舵を切る。チャートの数字はその代償を正直に示している——しかしホプキンス自身はそれを意に介さなかった。「商業的成功を一切考えずに作った」という言葉通り、Immunityとその後の成功によって、彼はすでに好きな音楽を作れる経済的・精神的な余裕を手にしていたのだ。
パンデミックによる強制停止と、エクアドルのタヨス洞窟探検という体験、精度高きケタミンセラピーとの関わり。これらが重なり、ホプキンスは初めてドラムを一切排除したアルバムを制作する。
1時間を超える本作はケタミントリップの平均時間に合わせて設計されており、リリース後すぐに実際のサイケデリック療法の場でセラピストやクライアントに使われはじめた。
サイケデリック療法とは 禅的な瞑想で欲を手放すような漸進的なプロセスとは異なる。ケタミンやシロシビン(マジックマッシュルームの主成分)などの物質を用いて通常では到達できない意識変容状態を短時間で引き起こし、トラウマの解消や自己認識の転換を促すという、より急激で医療的なアプローチだ。ホプキンスはリリース前からインペリアル・カレッジ・ロンドンのシロシビン臨床試験のための音楽体験も手がけており、このアルバムはその延長として設計されている。
UKアルバムチャートでは最高30位・2週間のチャートインにとどまり、Singularityの6位と比べると大きく後退した。しかしチャートには表れないところで、この作品は確実に生きていた——セラピストや利用者からの大量のフィードバックを受け、ホプキンスはウェブサイトにトリップレポートのページを設けるほどだった。
ここで注目したいのは、ドラムの排除が単なる音楽的選択にとどまらない可能性だ。複雑なリズムグリッドの上に音を精緻に配置していくというImmunityやSingularityの制作スタイルは、膨大な時間と論理的な判断を要する作業だ。それを手放し、持続音やドローンを中心とするアンビエントへ移行したとき、制作の性質は根本的に変わる——音はリズムの格子に縛られることなく、直感の動きにそのままついてくる。「この作品では意識的な計画を一切しなかった」とホプキンスは振り返っている。瞑想のための音楽を作るという目的と、アンビエントという形式と、潜在意識を信頼するという創作姿勢の三つが、この時期に初めて完全に一致した。
2022年のDreamachine委託作品を胚として、2023年後半に発展した41分8章構成の大作。「祭壇(altar)」に始まり「失われるものは何もない(nothing is lost)」で静かに終わるこの作品は、ホプキンス自身の希望では一つの連続した体験として聴かれるべきものだ(8つへのトラック分割はレコード会社の要請による)。洞窟のような重低音、催眠的なドラム、昇華するメロディが織り重なる、セレモニアルな大作である。
ロンドンで開催されたDreamachine——ストロボスコープ光によって目を閉じたまま幻視体験を引き起こす没入型インスタレーション——の音楽として委託されたことが出発点だ。Abletonのインタビューでホプキンスは、
「その性質上、かなりウォームでアクセスしやすいものにならざるを得なかった」
と語っており、没入型体験という依頼の制約が彼の音楽に新たな温かさをもたらし、それがRITUALへと昇華した。
チャートはUK最高51位にとどまり、Music for Psychedelic Therapyよりもさらに後退した。しかしRA誌は「巧みに作られており、感覚を研ぎ澄まし、内省を促す」と称賛し、Under the Radarは10点満点中8.5点を与えた。「委託仕事がアーティストの新しい扉を開ける」——Dreamachineという他者の内的体験をガイドするための音楽が、結果として彼自身の最も個人的な芸術へと昇華した。
RITUALを経て、ホプキンスのアンビエント作品はさらに新たな局面を迎える。アイスランドのポストクラシカル系作曲家たちとの共作を通じて、ドローンや電子音を基調とした内省的なアンビエントから、ストリングスやピアノを前面に立てたシンフォニックで壮大な音楽世界へと親和性を高めていった。
RITUALから約2ヶ月後に発表されたシングル。共作者のオーラヴル・アルナルズ(Ólafur Arnalds)はアイスランド出身のマルチ奏者・作曲家で、ネオクラシカルとエレクトロニクスを融合させた繊細なサウンドで国際的に高い評価を受けている。
この曲はワシントンD.C.のNASA本部に設置された一般向け初の没入型展示『Space for Earth』のために書き下ろされたもの。宇宙から地球を見た宇宙飛行士が体験する「概観効果(オーバービュー・エフェクト)」——地球の美しさと脆さへの圧倒的な気づき——を音で体感させるための演出音楽だ。
Music for Psychedelic TherapyやRITUALがドローンや持続音を基調としたアンビエントだったとすれば、Forever Heldはそこから一歩踏み出した趣を持つ。アルナルズによる豊かなストリングスアレンジが全面に広がり、宇宙的なスケール感と温かな包容力を持つ壮大なイメージを喚起する。アンビエントの静寂を保ちながらもフルオーケストラの響きによって感情的な解放をもたらすこの曲は、彼のアンビエント作品のキャリアの中でも屈指の傑作と言えるだろう。
この曲の波形データはNanoFicheディスクに刻印され、NASAのアルテミス計画の一環として月面に永久保存される予定だ。
そして興味深いのは、Coldplayとの縁の繰り返しだ。2008年、ホプキンスはViva la Vida制作セッション中にクリス・マーティンへ自作曲を聴かせた。その曲「Light Through the Veins」がアルバム1曲目「Life in Technicolor」のイントロとして採用され、Coldplayの代表作の幕開けを飾ることになった。それから16年後の2024年、Forever HeldがColdplayのアルバム『Moon Music』のオープニングを飾る。ホプキンスのキャリアは節目ごとにColdplayという巨大なポップの鏡に映し出されてきた。2008年の「Light Through the Veins」がエレクトロニカの気鋭のみずみずしいアンビエントだったとすれば、2024年の「Forever Held」は、燃え尽き・瞑想・サイケデリック体験・委託という数々の変容を経た果ての、宇宙スケールの静寂だ。
彼の変容の旅は2026年の現在も、新たな外的文脈との交差を見せている。2026年にリリースされたドキュメンタリー映画『Wilding』のサウンドトラックへの参加だ。本作は、英国サセックスの荒廃した農場に本来の生態系を取り戻す「リワイルディング(再野生化)」プロジェクトの18年間にわたる軌跡を追った映像作品である。
ホプキンスは本作にメインの共同制作者として名を連ねているが、全面的なニューアルバムではなく、アイスランドの映画音楽家・作曲家であるビッギ・ヒルマーズ(Biggi Hilmars)との共同プロジェクトという形をとっている。全13曲(31分)の構成だが、トラックリストを精査するとヒルマーズの単独曲も多く含まれており、ホプキンスの関与は部分的だ。また、4曲目の「New Land」のように、2013年の『Immunity』期の楽曲が再利用されている点からも、本作が映画のための委託仕事(コミッションワーク)の延長線上にあることがわかる。
音楽的には、ホプキンスが電子処理や幻想的なシンセを、ヒルマーズがドラマティックなストリングスやピアノなどのオーケストラテクスチャーを主に担当するという役割分担がなされている。「Wilding Theme」でホプキンスがリード音として使ったのは、自身の声をエフェクト処理して古代の木管楽器のような音に変えたものだ。この異質な電子音響が、ヒルマーズの紡ぐネオクラシカルな壮麗さと融け合い、自然ドキュメンタリーとしての世界観に独特の深みを与えている。
『Forever Held』以来のポストクラシカル勢との親和性が、映画音楽という職能的なフォーマットを通じてさらに実務的に深められた作品と言えるだろう。
Open Eye Signalのグリッチが世界のフロアを揺らしてから11年。Jon Hopkinsは今、フロアの熱狂とは対極の場所で音楽を作っている。
しかしその軌跡を辿れば、それは矛盾ではなく必然だったことがわかる。燃え尽きが瞑想を呼び、瞑想がDMTへの扉を開き、サイケデリック体験が音楽の目的を書き換え、委託仕事が新しい表現の地平を拓いた。
「音楽は薬であり、空間であり、儀式である」——その確信を深めながら、彼はフロアから祭壇へ、地球から宇宙へと、その音楽の射程を静かに広げ続けている。
そして今、アイスランドのポストクラシカル系作曲家たちとの共作を通じて、ホプキンスの音楽はさらに新たな変容の途上にある。電子音楽の文法で培ってきた内省と、ストリングスやピアノが紡ぐシンフォニックな壮大さが、今後どのように融合し深化していくのか。振り返れば先に紹介した画家であるヒルマ・アフ・クリントも霊的儀式を通じて宇宙から降りてくるイメージをそのまま絵にしていたと自分の作品について語っていた。ジョンホプキンスのNASAのプロジェクトもそうした親和性が参加に影響した可能性もある。彼はより自己暗示的なインスピレーションの世界を探求していくのだろうか。
from Douglas Vandergraph

Chapter One: The First Morning
Before the sun rose over Coronado, Jesus knelt alone in the sand where the Pacific came in cold and dark. The beach was empty except for the wind, the restless water, and the distant lights of the Naval Special Warfare Center. He had taken off His sandals and set them beside Him, not because the ground was clean, but because He had always known how to honor a place where men would be stripped of pretending. His hands rested open on His knees. His head was bowed. He prayed quietly to His Father while the tide moved in and out with the steady patience of something older than fear.
No one saw Him there, and maybe that was fitting. The story people would later search for as the Jesus goes through Navy SEAL training book did not begin with applause, a camera, or a dramatic entrance through a gate. It began with a Man praying before a day that would hurt. It began with silence before instructors shouted, before candidates ran, before the ocean took warmth out of bones and left young men wondering what they had truly brought with them.
There were other stories about courage, and some readers had already followed the related story of Jesus walking into courage under pressure, but this morning had its own burden. Here, courage would not be spoken about from a safe distance. It would be measured under boats, in cold surf, in wet uniforms heavy with sand, in the private moment when a man discovered whether the reason he came was strong enough to survive the pain of staying.
Jesus rose before the first candidates arrived in formation. He brushed the sand from His hands and walked toward the buildings where the class would gather, His steps unhurried, His face calm in a way that did not look soft. He wore the same Navy-issued training clothes as the others, plain and practical, with His name stenciled where everyone else’s name was stenciled. He did not look like a man pretending to belong. He looked like a servant who had chosen the lowest place and meant to remain there.
Cole Mercer noticed Him almost immediately and decided not to care. Cole was twenty-seven, older than some of the men around him, with a hard jaw, narrow eyes, and the tired posture of someone who had trained for years without ever resting inside himself. He had come from the fleet, not from comfort, and he had the quiet suspicion that every younger candidate with a clean haircut and a hungry smile was still carrying an idea of himself that the Pacific would punish by lunch. Cole had no smile left for the first morning. He had a folded photograph sealed in plastic inside his locker, a brother’s old challenge coin hidden in the bottom of his bag, and a sentence he had repeated so many times it had stopped sounding like thought and started sounding like law. Weakness gets people killed.
His younger brother, Nolan, had never been through BUD/S. He had never stood on that beach under a boat or heard an instructor count down while the whole class tried to move as one body. But Nolan had wanted this world with the pure, burning certainty of a nineteen-year-old who believed pain could baptize shame into purpose. He had trained badly, hidden injuries, lied about what he felt, and called Cole from a hospital bed after a training accident that took the dream from him before the Navy ever could. Three months later, he was gone. The official words had been careful and merciful. Cole’s private words were not. I should have seen it. I should have stopped him. I should have been harder, or softer, or something other than what I was.
The instructors came out just after sunrise, and whatever private weather men had brought with them disappeared beneath command presence. They were not cartoon tyrants. They were professionals with flat voices, sharp eyes, and the kind of authority that did not need to explain itself every minute. One of them, a senior chief with weathered skin and shoulders like a dock piling, stood before the class and let the silence do some of the work.
“Look around,” he said. “Some of you came here because you want a title. Some of you came here because you want to outrun something. Some of you came here because you think suffering will make you clean. I don’t care what story you told yourself to get here. From this point forward, the only story that matters is whether you can be trusted when you are cold, tired, afraid, and responsible for the man next to you. This training is not here to impress you. It is not here to hate you. It is here to build warriors who can operate under conditions most people will never see and still make disciplined decisions. If that offends your ego, the bell is easy to find.”
Cole’s eyes flicked toward the place where the brass bell waited. It was mounted where every candidate could see it, simple and bright, with no cruelty in it at all. That was the worst part. It did not chase anyone. It did not argue. It simply waited for a man to decide he was finished. Cole hated it at once, not because he intended to ring it, but because it looked too much like a mercy he did not trust.
The first hours moved with the blunt force of a door slamming shut on ordinary life. There were instructions, gear checks, corrections, accountability, and the constant demand to move faster than the body wanted to move. They learned again that small failures became shared burdens. A crooked line cost everyone. A misplaced item cost everyone. A slow response cost everyone. Nothing belonged only to the individual anymore, and that was the first violence done to the false self many of them had carried in. The class was no longer a collection of private ambitions. It was a group of men being taught, sometimes painfully, that war did not care about personal narratives.
Jesus stood in the same lines, carried the same gear, answered at the same volume, and moved when told to move. He did not draw attention by resisting correction, and He did not draw attention by performing humility for an audience. When an instructor stopped in front of Him and inspected His uniform, Jesus held still. When the instructor found nothing to correct, he found something anyway, because training had its own language and comfort was not one of its words.
“Candidate,” the instructor said, close enough that his voice needed no volume, “you think patience is going to get you through this?”
Jesus looked straight ahead. “No, Instructor.”
“What will?”
“Obedience, Instructor.”
The instructor watched Him for a moment longer than necessary. “We’ll see.”
Cole heard it and felt irritation rise in him. Obedience sounded too clean. Men loved clean words before the water got hold of them. He had known men who spoke about discipline and brotherhood until the first time their legs cramped under a load and their teeth began to chatter. Cole had stopped trusting words, including his own. He trusted lungs, shoulders, feet, and the stubborn refusal to ask for help. Everything else was decoration.
By midmorning the class was wet, sandy, and learning the grammar of discomfort. The Pacific did not receive them gently. It came into their uniforms, filled boots, flattened shirts against skin, and turned every movement into labor. They rolled in the sand until it found places sand was not meant to be. They ran until breathing became a narrow thing. They lifted boats overhead and discovered that teamwork could be ruined by one man trying to prove he was stronger than the team. The instructors saw everything. They corrected selfish strength as sharply as weakness.
“Boat crew three,” the senior chief called, “you have one hero and six passengers. Fix it.”
Cole was the hero. He knew it before anyone said his name. He had taken too much of the weight at the bow, partly because he could, partly because he did not believe the thinner candidate beside him could hold his share, and partly because Cole did not know how to feel safe unless he was suffering more than everyone else. His neck burned. His arms shook. He told himself the shaking was useful. He told himself pain meant he was paying a debt.
“Mercer,” the candidate beside him gasped, “shift it.”
“I’ve got it,” Cole snapped.
“You don’t,” the candidate said, and the boat dipped wrong.
The correction came fast. The whole crew paid for the imbalance. They hit the surf again, came back out, carried the boat again, and Cole felt the first thin thread of anger coil around his exhaustion. Not at the instructors. Not even at the candidate beside him. At the truth. The boat had not cared about his grief. The ocean had not respected his private vow. His refusal to share the weight had made the weight worse for everyone.
Jesus was in another boat crew, but Cole saw Him when they crossed paths near the waterline. He was soaked through, sand across His face, breathing hard but steady. A candidate behind Him stumbled as the boat shifted, and Jesus adjusted instantly, taking no glory in it, making no speech, simply moving enough to keep the man from being crushed by the sudden change. The instructor saw it too.
“Don’t baby him,” the instructor barked.
Jesus kept moving. “No, Instructor.”
But Cole had seen the difference. Jesus had not rescued the man from training. He had helped him stay in it.
That distinction irritated Cole more than open weakness would have. Open weakness could be judged. This was something else. It was strength without display, mercy without escape, and Cole had no category for it that did not threaten the way he had survived the last few years of his life. He looked away and drove his shoulder back under the boat.
By the end of the first day, the class had already become quieter in the spaces between commands. Some faces had changed. The shine had gone out of the men who had arrived smiling too loudly. Others had grown sharper, not better, just sharper, as if fear had carved them down to the part that wanted to endure. Cole sat on the ground near his assigned space, boots beside him, fingers stiff from cold and effort. He worked at a blister with the concentration of a man defusing something. Across the room, someone laughed too hard at nothing. Someone else stared at the floor. A few men wrote quick notes they might never send.
Jesus sat nearby and cleaned sand from His gear with careful attention. He did not seem untouched by the day. His shoulders moved with fatigue. His hands bore the small signs every man’s hands carried after the first real hours of the pipeline. There was no glow around Him, no distance from pain, no secret exemption from the body He had chosen to inhabit. He looked tired, and because He looked tired without looking defeated, Cole found himself watching longer than he meant to.
“You prior service?” Cole asked finally, though he had meant to say nothing.
Jesus looked up. “I have worked with My hands.”
Cole let out a dry breath that was not quite a laugh. “That’s not the same thing.”
“No,” Jesus said. “It is not.”
Most men would have defended themselves. Jesus did not. That should have ended the conversation, but silence with Him did not feel empty. It felt like standing near a question.
Cole went back to his blister. “You know what this place does to people?”
“I am beginning to see it.”
“No,” Cole said, sharper than he intended. “You’re beginning to see the first day. That’s not the same thing either.”
Jesus folded a cloth over His cleaned gear and rested His hands on it. “You are right.”
Again, no defense. Again, no need to win. Cole hated how much harder that made it to dismiss Him.
A candidate near the far end of the room cursed under his breath when he could not get a strap threaded correctly with swollen fingers. Another man told him to hurry up. The first man muttered something about quitting before the week was out. It was half a joke and half a wound showing through. Cole heard it and felt disgust come up like heat. He wanted to tell the man to quit now and stop wasting everyone’s time. He wanted to say the bell was outside and nobody had locked the door.
Before he could speak, Jesus stood, crossed the room, and crouched beside the struggling candidate. He did not take the gear away from him. He did not make the man feel small by doing the task for him. He held one side of the strap steady and said quietly, “Pull it through with your other hand.”
The man swallowed, tried again, and got it.
“Thanks,” he said, embarrassed.
Jesus nodded once and returned to His place.
Cole looked down at his own hands. He remembered Nolan at seventeen, trying to tape his ankle before a run, fumbling because he wanted so badly to be seen as strong that he could not admit he did not know what he was doing. Cole had laughed at him then, not cruelly, he had told himself, just the way brothers laughed. Stop being soft, he had said. Figure it out. Nolan had figured out many things alone after that. Too many.
The memory came with such force that Cole stood before he had decided to move. He walked outside into the evening air, needing the cold because the room had become too small. The bell stood where it had stood all day. Beyond it, the Pacific moved in the darkening light, indifferent and endless. Cole stared at the bell until his eyes stung from wind.
He did not hear Jesus approach, but he knew when He was there.
“You thinking about ringing it?” Cole asked, still looking forward.
“No,” Jesus said.
“Then why come out here?”
“To stand with you.”
Cole’s jaw tightened. “I don’t need that.”
Jesus did not answer quickly. The restraint in Him was not hesitation. It was mercy refusing to trample a locked door.
After a while, He said, “Who told you that needing someone makes you dangerous?”
Cole turned then, anger rising because the words had gone too near the place he had spent years armoring. Jesus was not looking at the bell. He was looking at him. Not through him. Not past him. At him.
“You don’t know me,” Cole said.
“I know you are carrying more than this day gave you.”
Cole almost laughed, but it failed in his throat. “Everybody here is carrying something.”
“Yes,” Jesus said. “And not everything a man carries makes him stronger.”
The wind pressed Cole’s wet shirt against his skin. Somewhere behind them, an instructor’s voice cut across the compound, and candidates moved in response. The training did not pause for private pain. It would not wait for Cole to understand himself. Tomorrow would come with more running, more water, more correction, more chances to be exposed. He knew that. He had trained for that. What he had not trained for was someone standing beside him without demanding performance, without being impressed by pain, without letting him hide behind it.
Cole looked back at the bell. “My brother wanted this.”
Jesus remained silent.
“He didn’t make it here,” Cole said, the words rough. “Didn’t even get close.”
The confession was small, almost nothing, but it was more than Cole had said to anyone in months. He expected Jesus to soften His voice into pity. He expected a phrase that could be rejected. Instead Jesus let the truth breathe in the cold air between them.
At last He said, “You came for him.”
Cole closed his eyes briefly. “I came because he can’t.”
“That is love,” Jesus said. “But love becomes a heavy master when it is mixed with punishment.”
Cole opened his eyes. “You talk like a man who’s never had to live with failing somebody.”
Jesus looked toward the ocean then, and something in His face changed, not into weakness, but into a sorrow deeper than Cole expected and steadier than Cole could understand.
“No,” Jesus said softly. “I do not speak as one who is unfamiliar with grief.”
The answer unsettled Cole. He wanted to argue, but a horn sounded, and the moment broke under the ordinary demand of the schedule. Men began moving again. Names were called. Gear had to be checked. Bodies had to return to the next command whether hearts were ready or not.
Jesus turned back toward the compound. “Come,” He said.
It was not dramatic. It was not an invitation to escape. It was the simplest command in the world and somehow the hardest. Cole stood by the bell one breath longer, his brother’s name pressing against his ribs. Then he followed.
That night, sleep came thin and temporary. Cole lay awake longer than he should have, listening to the restless shifting of men who had already begun to understand that the pipeline did not merely test strength. It uncovered worship. Some men worshiped achievement. Some worshiped reputation. Some worshiped the version of themselves they had promised never to lose. Cole had worshiped endurance because endurance did not ask him to forgive himself. It only asked him to keep hurting.
Across the room, Jesus lay still with His eyes closed, His breathing even. Cole could not tell whether He slept or prayed. Maybe with Him the two were closer than with other men. Outside, the Pacific kept moving under the dark, waiting for morning.
Chapter Two: The Weight No Man Can Carry Alone
The first days of First Phase did not feel like a beginning to Cole. They felt like the removal of every excuse a man might have carried into the compound. Time narrowed until there was only the next command, the next movement, the next correction, the next cold rush of the Pacific coming hard against the body. The class learned quickly that BUD/S did not need to invent suffering when ordinary things could become suffering under pressure. A run became a mirror. A swim became a confession. A boat became a question asked across seven pairs of shoulders. A wet uniform became a second skin that never warmed.
Jesus stayed in it like every other man. He ran when told to run, lifted when told to lift, went into the surf when the class was ordered into the surf, and came out with the same sand pressed into His face and neck. There were moments when His breathing was heavy and His legs trembled after long sets of calisthenics. Cole noticed because he had expected not to notice. Some secret part of him had been waiting for Jesus to reveal Himself as untouched by strain, and when He did not, Cole was left with something harder to dismiss. Holiness, at least in this place, did not float above pain. It entered the line and bore the weight.
The instructors remained relentless without becoming careless. They watched details with a seriousness that made every candidate understand the stakes. When men were sloppy, the correction came fast. When a boat crew failed to move together, the instructors forced them back to the beginning until the lesson passed from their ears into their muscles. They did not praise easily, and they did not confuse volume with hatred. Their job was not to comfort a man’s image of himself. Their job was to find out whether the image would crack before the mission did.
Cole understood that part. He even respected it. What he could not understand was why the harder the training became, the more visible his old failure felt. Nolan had never been inside these gates, yet he seemed everywhere. Cole heard him in the short breath of a candidate trying not to fall behind on a soft-sand run. He saw him in the young faces that still had too much hope in them. He felt him whenever someone hid pain behind pride, which meant Cole felt him often, because the class was full of men trying to prove they were not afraid.
On the fourth morning, the class ran before dawn under a low gray sky. The beach was damp and heavy, and the instructors moved along the edges like men reading weather. Cole’s boat crew had been struggling since the first day, not because they lacked strength, but because they had too much of the wrong kind. Two candidates pulled ahead whenever they were angry. One faded when he was embarrassed. Another made jokes when he was scared, and the jokes got sharper as exhaustion cut deeper. Cole tried to solve all of it by taking more weight, barking harder, and punishing himself until everyone else either matched him or resented him.
By the time they reached the turn point, resentment was winning.
“Mercer,” said Eli Rourke, the thinner candidate who had stood beside Cole under the boat on the first day, “you keep throwing the rhythm off.”
Cole did not look at him. “Keep up.”
“I am keeping up. You’re not listening.”
The boat shifted, and the whole crew staggered. A horn cut through the morning, followed by the instructor’s voice. “Boat crew three, recover. On the line.”
They dropped down into the wet sand for pushups. The boat sat above them like judgment. Cole’s shoulders burned as he moved with the count. Sand stuck to his lips. The instructor crouched near his face.
“Mercer, what are you solving?”
Cole kept his eyes down. “Instructor?”
“You heard me.”
Cole pushed up again, lowered again, waited for the count. “The problem, Instructor.”
“No,” the instructor said. “You are becoming the problem loudly enough to call it leadership.”
The words landed harder than the pushups. Cole’s arms kept moving because they had to, but something inside him recoiled. He had been corrected before. He had been cursed at, smoked, humbled, and physically outmatched. This was different. It did not attack his effort. It exposed the thing he had mistaken for virtue.
The instructor stood. “Your crew does not need a martyr. It needs a teammate. Figure out the difference.”
When they were ordered up again, Cole grabbed the boat and said nothing. For the next half mile he tried to adjust, but trying not to dominate was not the same as trusting. He kept flinching toward the weight. He kept correcting before others could correct themselves. He kept hearing the instructor’s sentence under the roar of his own pulse. You are becoming the problem loudly enough to call it leadership.
Jesus’ boat crew ran a little ahead of them, steady and quiet except for the necessary calls. Cole watched the way they moved around Him. He did not appear to command them, yet they listened when He spoke. He did not appear to compete for the hardest position, yet somehow the burden never went unmanaged. When a shorter candidate began to lose step, Jesus shifted the call so the man could find the rhythm again. When another man’s frustration sharpened his voice, Jesus answered with calm that did not shame him. There was nothing soft about it. It was disciplined mercy, and the crew moved better because of it.
After the run came the obstacle course. The O-course stood like a field of exposed truths, each obstacle demanding strength, balance, timing, and the humility to learn what the body did not yet know. Men who could run for miles discovered they could not move efficiently over wood and rope. Men who were strong in the gym discovered grip failed quickly when wet and tired. Cole had trained for this. He moved well through the early obstacles, driving himself with the grim satisfaction of competence.
Then Eli slipped on the cargo net ahead of him.
It was not a dramatic fall, not the kind that stops a day, just one foot missing, one hand grabbing late, one body swinging wrong while the line behind him compressed. Cole was close enough to brace, close enough to steady him, close enough to keep the crew’s rhythm from collapsing. Instead anger flashed first. He saw not Eli, but Nolan stumbling through a training run he should have stopped, Nolan saying he was fine when he was not, Nolan wanting approval so badly he would rather break than disappoint.
“Move,” Cole hissed.
Eli’s jaw clenched. “I’m trying.”
“Try faster.”
Eli rushed, lost his grip again, and this time nearly took the candidate below him off the obstacle. An instructor’s shout snapped across the course. The line halted. The whole crew paid for the failure in time and attention. Cole climbed down with blood hot in his face, not because Eli had slipped, but because Cole had seen what he did and could not pretend it was leadership.
Jesus came off the course later, breathing hard, one forearm scraped and bleeding lightly where wood had taken skin. He accepted a correction from an instructor, nodded, and moved on. When the class had a brief window to tend to gear and bodies, Jesus sat near the edge of the area and wrapped the scrape with simple care. Cole watched Him do it one-handed for a moment before speaking.
“You could have asked somebody.”
Jesus looked at the bandage, then at Cole. “Yes.”
“Why didn’t you?”
“I was able.”
Cole sat heavily beside Him, not because he had planned to, but because exhaustion made avoidance less tidy. “That’s different from what you told me.”
Jesus finished wrapping the scrape. “It is.”
Cole stared toward the course. “So needing help is allowed, unless you don’t need help.”
“When a man refuses help because he is proud, pride teaches him to call isolation strength. When a man demands help for what he has been given strength to do, comfort teaches him to call dependence love. Both can become untrue.”
Cole looked at Him. “You always answer like that?”
Jesus’ face remained calm. “No.”
For the first time in days, Cole almost smiled. It disappeared quickly.
“I made Eli worse today,” he said.
Jesus did not rush to soften the admission. “Yes.”
Cole appreciated that and hated it at the same time. “He slipped. I got angry. Not because of him.”
“Because of your brother.”
Cole swallowed. The name had not been spoken, but the room it opened was the same. “Nolan used to train with me. He thought I had answers. I acted like I did.”
Jesus listened, and the listening itself felt like a shelter Cole did not know how to stand inside.
“He was always trying to catch up,” Cole continued. “I kept telling him to stop making excuses. I thought if I made him tougher, he’d be safer. I thought softness was what would get him hurt.” He pressed his palms against his knees until the knuckles lightened. “He was hurt already. I just taught him to hide it better.”
A group of candidates passed nearby, laughing in that strange way tired men laugh when they have not yet decided whether they are broken. Cole lowered his voice.
“When he called from the hospital, I told him he’d recover. I told him there were other ways to serve. I told him all the right things. But he knew I was disappointed. I never said it, but he knew. That’s what I remember. Not the encouragement. The disappointment.”
Jesus looked toward the beach, where the waterline kept changing and returning. “You cannot go back and become the brother you wish you had been.”
Cole breathed out through his nose, a bitter sound. “That’s supposed to help?”
“No,” Jesus said. “It is the truth before help.”
Cole went still.
Jesus turned His hands over, palms open. They were marked by work, by sand, by the strain of the same training. “You have made punishment into a kind of loyalty. But punishment cannot raise the dead, and it cannot teach the living to trust you.”
The words struck so directly that Cole looked away. He wanted to reject them. He wanted to say Jesus did not understand, that grief had rules only the guilty knew, that some men did not deserve the relief of forgiveness. But the objection would not form cleanly. He had no answer for the candidates he had made smaller with the very discipline he claimed was for their good. He had no answer for Eli’s face on the cargo net. He had no answer for the fact that Nolan was gone and Cole was still using his brother’s memory like a blade.
Before he could speak, an instructor called the class back. The day swallowed the moment, as it always did. Gear had to move. Bodies had to move. Thought had to become action or be left behind.
The next event was a pool evolution, one of the early steps into the water confidence that would define much of the pipeline. It was controlled, supervised, and serious, with safety watched closely and standards made clear. The instructors explained the requirements in plain terms. Panic was the enemy. Discipline mattered. A man had to learn how to think when breath, fear, equipment, and pressure all competed for control. There was no romance in it. There was only training designed to prepare men for environments where panic could become fatal.
Cole had expected to excel. He was comfortable in the water and had trained until underwater tasks felt almost ordinary. But fatigue changes a man’s relationship with confidence. So does guilt. During one drill, as he worked through the sequence required of him, a sudden memory of Nolan’s hospital room rose with the clarity of cold glass. The sound of machines. The white blanket. Nolan looking smaller than he should have looked. Cole’s own voice saying there were other ways to serve while something disappointed and ashamed sat behind his eyes.
His rhythm broke.
It was only a moment, but underwater a moment can become a country. His chest tightened. His hands moved too fast. The task blurred. He recovered before the instructors had to intervene, but not before he knew what had happened. When he surfaced, he drew air with more force than necessary and heard his own breath like accusation.
An instructor’s eyes fixed on him. “Mercer, you lost discipline.”
“Yes, Instructor.”
“Why?”
Cole stared forward, water running down his face. The old answer came first. No excuse, Instructor. It was useful, clean, and incomplete. He gave it anyway.
“No excuse, Instructor.”
The instructor did not look impressed. “That’s not what I asked. I asked why.”
Cole’s throat worked. Around him, the pool deck seemed too bright. The other candidates stood silent, waiting inside the discomfort of someone else being seen.
“I let my mind leave the task, Instructor.”
“That can kill people.”
“Yes, Instructor.”
“Then keep your mind where your body is.”
“Yes, Instructor.”
The correction was professional and exact. It did not know his story and did not need to. That almost made it merciful. The instructor turned and continued the evolution. Cole moved through the rest of it with discipline restored, but something had shifted. He had believed his grief made him harder. In the water, it had made him absent.
That evening, boat crew three sat together in a strained silence while tending gear. Eli had a raw place on his palm from the cargo net and kept flexing his fingers. Cole saw it, looked away, then looked back. The apology sat inside him like a stone. He had said hard things to men without effort. He had given orders, corrections, warnings, and judgments. Simple repentance felt heavier than the boat.
Jesus was across the room, not watching him in any obvious way, but Cole sensed that He knew the moment had come. That made Cole angry again, though the anger had less strength now.
He stood and crossed to Eli. The room did not stop, but a few men noticed.
“Rourke,” Cole said.
Eli looked up warily. “What?”
“I made it worse on the O-course.”
Eli waited, probably expecting an explanation dressed as an apology.
Cole forced himself to continue without armor. “You slipped. I got angry because of something that had nothing to do with you. Then I rushed you, and you nearly fell again. That was on me.”
Eli’s expression changed, not into warmth, but into surprise. “Yeah,” he said. “It was.”
Cole nodded. The agreement stung, as it should have. “I’ll call rhythm tomorrow. Not weight. Rhythm. If I’m off, say it.”
One of the other crew members snorted softly, as if the idea of correcting Cole and surviving was worth a laugh. Cole looked at him.
“I mean it.”
Eli studied him a moment. “All right.”
It was not reconciliation in the way stories sometimes pretend reconciliation happens. Nobody embraced. Nobody gave a speech. The boat crew did not suddenly become brothers in a single breath. But the air changed a little. A door opened. Trust, Cole sensed, did not arrive as a feeling. It began as a man making himself correctable.
Later, after lights out, Cole lay awake again. His body hurt in layered ways now, from shoulders to shins, from palms to hips. Around him, men slept as hard as they could inside the brief mercy given to them. Somewhere in the darkness, someone whispered a prayer so softly Cole could not make out the words. He wondered whether it was Jesus, but when he turned his head, he saw Jesus already kneeling near His rack, barely visible in the dimness, head bowed, hands open.
Cole did not know how to pray anymore. Not really. He had said things after Nolan died, but most of them had been accusations with God’s name attached. He had asked why. He had asked where God had been. He had asked what use mercy was when the phone had already rung and the funeral had already happened. Eventually he had stopped asking because silence seemed like one more answer he did not want.
But watching Jesus kneel in a room full of exhausted men, Cole felt a different question move through him.
What if God had not been absent from his brother’s pain simply because Cole had not known how to see Him there?
The question did not heal him. It did not make the memory gentle. It did not turn grief into something clean. But it kept him awake in a new way. For the first time in months, he wondered whether his brother’s life had been more than the manner of his losing it. He wondered whether love could require him to stop becoming cruel in Nolan’s name.
Morning came hard and gray again. The instructors wasted none of it. Boat crews formed on the beach, and the Pacific waited with its cold instruction. Cole stood beside Eli under the boat. The weight settled onto their shoulders, familiar and immediate.
“Lift,” the command came.
They lifted.
The boat wobbled at first, and Cole’s instincts surged toward control. He wanted to take more, force more, become more. Instead he listened. He felt the crew’s rhythm through the wood, through the strain in the men around him, through the slight unevenness in Eli’s side.
“Shorten step,” Cole called. “Together.”
Eli answered, breath tight. “Together.”
The crew adjusted. Not perfectly. Not beautifully. But better.
Jesus’ boat crew passed them on the left, moving toward the surf. For one brief moment, Cole and Jesus looked at each other across the space between boats. Jesus did not smile in triumph. He did not nod as if Cole had become a finished man. He simply looked at him with that same steady mercy, the kind that told the truth and did not leave.
Then the instructors sent them into the water, and every thought became cold.
Chapter Three: Breakout
First Phase continued to take the class apart in ways that were more precise than Cole had expected. It was not chaos, though it felt like chaos to men who had confused comfort with order. The schedule was tight, the standards were clear, and every evolution seemed designed to reveal whether a man could still think when his body had begun to argue with him. Running, swimming, calisthenics, boats, logs, inspections, obstacle course work, classroom instruction, and water confidence did not simply pile onto one another. They braided together until weakness in one place pulled on every other place.
Cole began to understand that BUD/S was not asking for pain alone. Pain was common. Anyone could suffer for a while if pride or fear gave him enough fuel. The training asked for disciplined suffering, shared suffering, suffering that did not make a man stupid, cruel, careless, or self-absorbed. That distinction worked on him more slowly than the cold, but it worked on him just as deeply. He could still carry weight. He could still run. He could still enter the surf without hesitating. But now, under the boat, he heard the crew. He heard Eli’s breath when it shortened too much. He heard the man behind him losing the count. He heard his own voice when it started turning sharp and learned to pull it back before it cut someone who was already bleeding inside.
Jesus did not praise him for this. That mattered to Cole in a way he did not want to admit. Praise might have allowed him to turn repentance into another kind of performance, another hard thing he could master and wear. Jesus simply remained near the work. He corrected when truth required it, received correction when instructors gave it, and served without turning service into theater. Sometimes Cole saw Him in the chow hall eating quietly among men too tired to talk. Sometimes he saw Him after an evolution rinsing sand from a shared piece of gear with more care than anyone expected from a man whose own hands were shaking. Sometimes, in the few private seconds a day allowed, Cole saw Him praying.
The prayers bothered him less now. They still unsettled him, but not because they seemed weak. If anything, Jesus looked strongest there, not because He escaped the world while praying, but because He returned to it without resentment.
By the end of the next week, the class had changed. Men were gone. Some had rung the bell, their helmets placed in the line that spoke without needing a speech. Some had been rolled for injuries or performance, leaving behind empty spaces that the remaining candidates learned not to stare at too long. The bell had become part of the landscape, but not a harmless one. It waited in sun and fog, through the smell of wet canvas and sweat, through the hollow quiet that came after a man decided he was done. Cole had thought he would despise every man who walked to it. He did not. That surprised him. The first time he watched a candidate ring out after a brutal morning in the surf, he felt anger rise, then drain into something heavier and more human.
The man’s name was Reeves. He had been loud on the first day, always ready with a confident answer, always grinning as if he had already survived the thing that had not yet begun. Now he stood before the bell with red eyes and a jaw that trembled from cold or shame or both. He rang it three times, set his helmet down, and stepped back. The sound carried across the compound cleanly. It did not mock him. It simply announced that his part in this class was over.
Cole watched from formation, soaked and breathing hard. A few days earlier he might have used Reeves as proof that some men were not built for hard things. Now he saw the way Reeves kept his eyes down as he walked away, and he thought of Nolan. Not because Nolan had quit, but because Cole understood something awful and tender about wanting a place to prove your worth and discovering that your worth could not survive if it depended on that place accepting you.
An instructor let the class sit with the sound for a moment before speaking. “That bell is not your enemy,” he said. “Your fantasies are. The sooner those die, the sooner we find out who can be trained.”
Cole carried that sentence with him into the afternoon.
The next days brought more water. Ocean swims under controlled supervision became long conversations between fear and discipline. The Pacific off Coronado was not a metaphor when a man was inside it. It was cold, moving, salt-heavy, and indifferent to confidence. Candidates learned to control breathing, protect each other, navigate the distance, and respect conditions they could not command. In the pool, water confidence evolutions exposed the difference between a man who looked brave and a man who could remain orderly when control was taken from him. Instructors watched constantly. Safety was present, but safety did not mean ease. It meant standards could be pressed hard because eyes were trained to see when the line between training and danger had to be guarded.
One afternoon, Cole failed an evolution he had expected to pass.
It happened in the pool, not dramatically enough for anyone else to remember the way he would. He started well. His movements were clean. His mind stayed on the sequence. Then the old pressure came in, not as a memory this time, but as a sentence in Nolan’s voice that had no sound. Don’t be disappointed in me. Cole felt his chest tighten. The task continued, but he rushed a transition and broke the standard. An instructor stopped him, reset the situation, and made the failure plain.
“Mercer, you are still fighting what is not in the pool.”
Cole stood on the deck with water running from his hair and down the bridge of his nose. The words were not shouted. That made them worse.
“Yes, Instructor.”
“You want to be useful here, be here.”
“Yes, Instructor.”
“You want to carry ghosts, do it somewhere they won’t get teammates killed.”
“Yes, Instructor.”
The instructor moved on. The class moved on. Cole stood only as long as he was allowed and then returned to work. But the correction stayed with him. He had thought he was hiding Nolan inside private grief. The training kept revealing that nothing stayed private under sufficient pressure. A man’s hidden altar would eventually demand sacrifice from everyone near him.
That night, he found Jesus outside near the edge of the compound, where the air smelled of salt and wet pavement. The lights made small trembling paths on puddles left from rinsed gear. Jesus was standing with His hands loosely at His sides, looking toward the dark water beyond the buildings. Cole approached slowly, partly because his legs hurt and partly because he no longer knew how to begin conversations with Him without being changed by them.
“I failed today,” Cole said.
Jesus turned. “I saw.”
“Of course You did.”
There was no accusation in Jesus’ face. “Would you rather I had not?”
Cole leaned against a post and looked down. “Maybe.”
“Then you would be alone with it.”
Cole breathed through the tiredness in his chest. “I’m used to that.”
“Yes,” Jesus said. “But you were not made for it.”
The words were gentle, and that gentleness made them difficult. Cole rubbed both hands over his face. The skin around his eyes felt raw from salt and lack of sleep, though Hell Week had not even begun. That fact felt almost absurd. They were not yet in the part everyone whispered about, and already men were being separated from what they had believed about themselves.
“I keep thinking about the last time I saw him,” Cole said. “Nolan. Not the funeral. Before that. Hospital room. He kept apologizing. I told him to stop. I told him he was alive and that mattered. But I was angry. Not yelling, not even saying it, but angry because he had damaged the dream. His dream, maybe mine too. I don’t know anymore.”
Jesus listened with His whole attention.
Cole looked toward the darkness. “When he died, everybody told me it wasn’t my fault. They said grief does things. They said people make choices. They said I couldn’t have known. I hated them for saying it because some part of me wanted it to be my fault. If it was my fault, then at least it meant I mattered enough to have stopped it.”
The confession left him tired in a new way. He expected Jesus to step closer. Instead Jesus stayed where He was, giving Cole room to stand inside what he had said.
“At times guilt feels less frightening than helplessness,” Jesus said.
Cole’s throat tightened. “Yes.”
“But guilt is a poor shepherd. It keeps calling you back to a field where nothing living can be fed.”
Cole’s eyes burned, and he was too exhausted to turn it into anger. “Then what am I supposed to do with him?”
“Love him truthfully.”
Cole looked at Him. “He’s gone.”
“Yes.”
“How do I love him now?”
Jesus’ voice remained quiet. “By refusing to make his memory a weapon against the men still beside you. By telling the truth about what happened without making yourself god over what you could not control. By becoming the kind of brother you now know men need.”
Cole let those words settle, and they did not settle easily. They struck places that still resisted mercy. He wanted something harsher, because harshness felt more deserved. Jesus gave him something costlier. Responsibility without self-worship. Grief without cruelty. Love without punishment.
Before Cole could answer, the door behind them opened and Eli stepped out carrying two canteens. He paused when he saw them. “Didn’t mean to interrupt.”
“You didn’t,” Cole said.
Eli held up one canteen. “You left this.”
Cole stared at it. A week earlier he would have heard judgment in the gesture. Now he saw a man helping him not fail some small inspection that would cost the crew. He took it.
“Thanks.”
Eli lingered, awkward with kindness. “You good?”
Cole looked at Jesus, then back at Eli. The honest answer was complicated, and tired men did not always have room for complicated. “Not yet,” he said. “But I’m here.”
Eli nodded as if he understood more than the words. “That’s something.”
After Eli went back inside, Cole held the canteen in both hands. It was such a small thing, but it carried weight. Trust had begun to move in directions he had not expected. Men he had pushed away were stepping nearer. It made him feel exposed. It also made the training feel different. Not easier. More dangerous in the right way.
The days narrowed toward Hell Week.
The instructors did not need to dramatize it. The class knew. Every candidate had heard stories long before arriving. They had heard about sleep deprivation, cold, surf torture, endless movement, boats, logs, runs, swims, problem-solving while exhausted, and the steady temptation of the bell. They had heard numbers, legends, warnings, jokes, and lies. None of those stories could prepare a body for the actual moment. Anticipation became its own evolution. Men counted days without saying they were counting. Some grew quiet. Some talked more. Gear was checked and rechecked. Feet were tended carefully. Small injuries became private negotiations. The body began asking questions pride could not answer.
Cole expected fear to come as a storm. Instead it came as a narrowing. He found himself noticing little things with unreasonable clarity. The worn grain of wood on a bench. The smell of disinfectant and damp clothing. The sound of tape being torn. Jesus’ hands folding a shirt. Eli flexing his fingers before sleep. The bell catching a stripe of evening light.
The night before breakout, the class had a heaviness over it that no one named. Cole lay on his rack and did not sleep immediately. His body wanted rest, but his mind kept walking circles around the week ahead. He thought of Nolan training in the dark before school, running too hard because he thought desire could protect him from injury. He thought of the hospital room. He thought of Jesus saying guilt was a poor shepherd. He thought of the instructor telling him to keep his mind where his body was. He thought of Eli bringing the canteen.
Then he did something he had not done honestly since the funeral. He prayed.
It was not eloquent. It was not clean. He did not know whether the words were correct. He stared at the ceiling and formed the prayer silently because speaking it aloud felt impossible.
Father, I do not know how to put him down without losing him.
The prayer frightened him after he prayed it. It sounded too much like surrender, and surrender sounded too much like betrayal. But across the room, Jesus turned His head slightly, as if He had heard something deeper than sound. Cole could not see His face clearly in the dimness. He did not need to. He knew.
Hell Week began in violence of sound and motion.
Breakout tore the class out of whatever fragile quiet it had managed to hold. Instructors came with command, noise, light, and urgency. The building filled with movement as candidates scrambled under orders, bodies shocked from rest into action. There was no time to admire fear. Gear had to be grabbed. Lines had to form. Instructions had to be followed. Men who had imagined the moment a hundred times discovered imagination had not included the way the heart kicked against the ribs when the week truly opened.
Cole moved fast. Not perfectly, but fast. Around him, men collided with the first seconds of a test too large to comprehend all at once. Jesus moved with the same urgency, His face focused, His body responding without panic. He did not appear above the moment. He was inside it, obeying through it. That steadied Cole more than any speech could have.
The class poured toward the grinder under the instructors’ control. The night air was cold against wet skin. The first evolutions came hard, designed to shock, organize, and begin the long work of wearing men down while demanding they function together. Sand, water, sweat, shouts, counting, correction, and motion blurred into one relentless beginning. The bell was visible. It would remain visible. That was part of the truth. Escape had a sound and a ritual. Endurance had no ceremony at all. It only had the next command.
At some point in the first long stretch, boat crew three faltered under the boat. The crew was cold, disoriented, and still adjusting to the brutal rhythm of the week. A candidate behind Cole missed the count, Eli stumbled, and the boat tilted hard. Cole’s old instinct surged with terrifying familiarity. Take more. Control more. Crush weakness before it spreads. He felt it rise like an animal waking in his chest.
Then he heard Jesus from a nearby crew, voice carrying through the noise without strain. “Together.”
It was not addressed to Cole, but it reached him.
Cole tightened his grip, not to steal the weight, but to steady his part. “Together,” he called to his crew. “Find the count. Together.”
Eli answered through chattering teeth. “Together.”
The man behind them got back into rhythm. The boat leveled. They kept moving.
It was a small victory, almost invisible inside the enormity of Hell Week’s first hours, but it mattered because it cost Cole something. He had not obeyed the old fear. He had not made himself savior of the crew. He had stayed present, carried his share, and called the men back without contempt. The week ahead would ask more from him than he had yet imagined, but the first real battle of it had already taken place somewhere no instructor could see.
Near dawn, after hours that felt both endless and only the beginning, the class was driven again toward the surf. The sky had begun to pale over Coronado. The Pacific waited cold and gray, spreading itself beneath the morning as if it had never known mercy or cruelty, only depth. The candidates entered together. Water closed around them. Breath seized. Teeth chattered. Commands came. Men obeyed.
Cole stood in the line with the ocean pulling warmth from his body. Jesus was several men down, wet hair against His forehead, eyes lifted toward the horizon for one brief moment before the next order came. Cole did not know whether Jesus was praying, breathing, or simply looking at the day, the Father had made. Maybe it was all of it.
The sun rose slowly, and Hell Week had only begun.
Chapter Four: The Bell in the Cold
Hell Week took time away from the men first.
Not all at once. It did not arrive as a clean line crossed on a calendar. It came in broken pieces until minutes no longer belonged to ordinary measurement. Night became water, water became sand, sand became the grit between teeth, and the body began to search for sleep in places no man would have believed sleep could be found. A candidate could close his eyes for half a breath while standing in formation and feel himself falling through whole rooms of dreams before an instructor’s voice pulled him back into the cold. The week did not merely exhaust them. It disassembled their sense of being separate men with private schedules, private preferences, private rights to comfort.
Cole learned quickly that the first hours had not been the test itself, only the door into it. The class moved through surf immersion, boat carries, log PT, runs on the beach, problem-solving evolutions, chow that seemed both too far away and too short, medical checks, gear accountability, and the endless demand to keep functioning as a team while the mind frayed around the edges. The instructors remained watchful and deliberate. Their pressure was severe, but it was not random. They wanted to see who could listen through misery, who could control fear without becoming numb, who could lead without feeding on others, who could be trusted when the body was begging for a smaller world.
By the second night, Cole no longer trusted his thoughts as they arrived. Some were useful, clean, and immediate. Lift. Step. Breathe. Count. Check Eli. Listen. Drink when ordered. Eat when given the chance. Others came twisted by exhaustion. The bell is warm. The bell is honest. The bell would end this. Sometimes Nolan’s face appeared so clearly in the dark that Cole almost turned to speak to him. Sometimes he felt his brother under the boat beside him, struggling to keep up, and Cole would have to force himself not to grab more weight than his share. The old vow still lived in him, but it was weaker now, not because the pain had lessened, but because the truth had begun to outlast it.
Jesus suffered visibly.
That mattered more as the week lengthened. Cole saw Him stumble once during a transition after a long stretch in the surf, His knees nearly giving under Him before He recovered. He saw Him blink hard against sleep deprivation while an instructor repeated instructions for a team task. He saw His hands tremble around a cup of water at chow. No one could honestly say He passed through the week untouched. His humanity was not decorative. It had weight, breath, soreness, hunger, and cold inside it. Yet the suffering did not bend Him inward. When He was tired, He became more attentive, not less. When the class grew sharper with one another, His voice became quieter and more exact. When men began to stare through each other as obstacles rather than teammates, He kept seeing faces.
On the third morning, or what Cole thought was the third morning, a candidate named Sutter began to unravel under the boat.
Sutter had been steady before Hell Week, not remarkable but dependable. He had a square face, red hair shaved close, and a habit of apologizing quickly when he made a mistake. Early in the pipeline, Cole would have found that habit irritating. Now he understood it as fear dressed in manners. Sutter did not want to cost anyone anything. That very fear made him costly when exhaustion stripped away his control.
They were moving with the boat on their heads after a long, cold evolution that had left several men shaking hard. The sand seemed deeper than it had any right to be. Commands came through wind and fatigue. Boat crew three tried to hold rhythm, but Sutter, positioned near the rear, kept drifting half a step late. The boat shifted. Eli adjusted. Cole called cadence, not angrily at first, then with more force when the wobble returned.
“Together,” Cole said. “Sutter, hear the count.”
“I hear it,” Sutter gasped.
“Then move on it.”
“I am.”
He was not. The boat lurched again, and the instructor’s voice hit them from the side. “Boat crew three, you are making that boat look lonely. Maybe it needs to spend some time with you in the surf.”
They paid for it immediately. The cold took them hard, then the sand took what the water left. When they were back under the boat, Sutter was worse. His eyes had gone wide and unfocused, and his lips moved as if he were arguing with someone no one else could hear. Cole felt the old anger rise, but it came now tangled with fear. A failing man could hurt everyone. A failing man could break the crew. A failing man could become Nolan in the worst possible way, not because Nolan had failed this training, but because Cole had once confused panic with weakness and weakness with betrayal.
“Sutter,” Cole said, trying to keep his voice level. “Look at me.”
Sutter did not.
Eli shifted beneath the weight. “Cole.”
“I see it.”
But seeing was not solving. The instructor saw it too and moved close, eyes hard, voice controlled. “Sutter, report.”
Sutter tried to answer and produced only breath.
“Report.”
“I’m—” Sutter swallowed. “I’m here, Instructor.”
“Then be here.”
“Yes, Instructor.”
The evolution continued. That was the mercy and the difficulty of the place. Men were watched, but they were not rescued from the lesson before the lesson had done its work. Sutter stayed in the crew, and Cole felt the burden of that trust more sharply than he had felt the boat.
During the next pause, short enough to feel almost imaginary, Jesus came near to refill water under instruction. His face was pale from cold, and sand lined the creases at the corners of His eyes. Cole leaned close while pretending to adjust his gear.
“He’s close,” Cole said.
Jesus looked toward Sutter without making him a spectacle. “Yes.”
“If he falls apart under the boat, he takes us with him.”
“Yes.”
Cole waited for more. None came. Irritation flared. “That’s all?”
Jesus turned His eyes to him. “You are asking whether mercy will make you unsafe.”
Cole’s mouth tightened. “Maybe I am.”
“Mercy without truth can become permission to drift,” Jesus said. “Truth without mercy can become a hand pushing a drowning man under.”
Cole looked away because the words found him too easily. “So what do I do?”
“Stay near enough to tell him the truth before fear tells it for you.”
The next hours made that answer costly. Sutter did not magically steady. He improved for moments, then slipped again. Cole had to call him back again and again without contempt. Eli helped. Another candidate, Vance, who had hardly spoken except in curses during the first days, began taking part of the cadence when Cole’s voice grew ragged. Something changed around Sutter, not into softness, but into disciplined attention. They did not carry his weight for him. They did not pretend he was fine. They refused to let him disappear inside his fear.
By evening, the world had become a blur of cold lamps, wet uniforms, and commands moving through darkness. Cole’s body had crossed into a strange country. His hands were swollen. His feet were battered despite every effort to care for them. His shoulders felt bruised from bone outward. Sleep deprivation played tricks with distance and sound. At one point he thought he saw Nolan standing by the bell in a gray sweatshirt from high school, looking disappointed and young. Cole blinked, and it was only a helmet resting where another candidate had left the class behind.
The bell kept calling without a voice.
Men continued to ring out. Not constantly, not dramatically, but enough that each sound entered the class like weather. Three clear strikes, then the empty place where a man had stood. Cole no longer judged the sound. He feared it, respected it, hated it, and understood it. It was not evil. It was simply available. That availability became harder to bear as the body wore down, because quitting did not have to argue forever. It only had to wait for one unguarded minute.
That minute came for Sutter deep in the night.
The class had been pushed through another punishing stretch, and boat crew three had stumbled through it ugly but intact. When they were ordered to move toward the next point, Sutter did not lift with them. The boat tilted, men cursed, and the instructor stopped them before the situation became unsafe. Sutter stood beneath the edge of the boat with his hands raised but not pressing, his eyes fixed somewhere beyond the crew.
“I’m done,” he whispered.
Cole heard him more than saw him. The words moved through the crew with frightening speed.
Eli said, “No, you’re not.”
Sutter shook his head. “I can’t. I can’t get my head right. I’m costing you. I’m done.”
The instructor stepped in, not cruel, not gentle, but clear. “Candidate, if you are done, you know where the bell is.”
Sutter looked toward it. Everyone did.
Cole felt time open in a strange way. The cold remained. The fatigue remained. The instructor remained. The choice belonged to Sutter, and no one could steal it from him without turning help into control. Cole knew that now in a way he had not known before. He also knew silence would become its own answer.
He lowered his voice so only the crew could hear. “Sutter, look at me.”
This time Sutter did.
“You’re scared,” Cole said.
Sutter’s eyes filled with humiliation. “Shut up.”
“You’re scared, and you’re tired, and you think leaving will protect us from you.”
Sutter’s face twisted. “I said shut up.”
“I know that lie,” Cole said, and his voice nearly broke. “I know what it sounds like when a man thinks disappearing is a gift.”
Eli turned his head slightly toward him. The other men went still under the boat. The instructor watched without interrupting.
Cole could feel Nolan’s name pressing against the back of his teeth. He had never said it to the crew. Not like this. Not here. But the moment had narrowed until truth had only one door.
“My brother thought that,” Cole said. “Not here. Not in this place. But he thought the world would be lighter without what he couldn’t carry. He was wrong. He was wrong, and I have been making men pay for how much I hate that I couldn’t make him know it.”
Sutter stared at him, breathing hard.
Cole stepped closer beneath the edge of the boat, keeping his hands where they belonged. “If you choose to leave this training, that choice is yours. But don’t call it saving us. Don’t call yourself a burden because you’re afraid. Tell the truth. If you are injured, say it. If you are unsafe, say it. If you are quitting, own it. But do not disappear and name it love.”
The words exhausted him more than the run had. Once spoken, they could not be gathered back. Nolan was in the open now, not as a weapon, not as an excuse, but as a wound finally brought into air.
Sutter’s jaw trembled. He looked toward the bell, then toward the boat, then at the men around him. “I don’t know if I can make it.”
Jesus’ voice came from just outside the crew. Cole had not realized He was there. “Then do not answer the whole week. Answer the next command truthfully.”
Sutter turned toward Him. In the harsh light, Jesus looked spent and steady at the same time, His face lined with fatigue, His eyes clear.
The instructor let the silence stand for one more second. Then he said, “Candidate Sutter, are you quitting?”
Sutter closed his eyes, opened them, and put both hands back to the boat. “No, Instructor.”
“Then lift.”
They lifted.
The boat rose unevenly at first, then steadied as the crew found the count. Cole called cadence with a voice scraped raw by cold and confession. Eli joined. Vance joined. Sutter moved late once, corrected, then moved with them. They went back into the night, not triumphant, not healed, but together. For Cole, that was enough to feel like the first honest thing he had done in years.
Later, during a brief medical check and recovery window, Jesus sat beside him on the ground. Neither spoke for a while. The class around them looked like a field of men held together by tape, will, and the supervision of professionals who understood exactly how far the line could be pressed. Someone laughed in a broken way at nothing. Someone else ate with the slow concentration of a child. Sutter sat with Eli a few yards away, head bowed, drinking when told to drink.
Cole stared at his hands. “I said it.”
“Yes,” Jesus said.
“I thought it would feel like dropping weight.”
“And did it?”
Cole considered lying. He was too tired. “No. It feels like bleeding.”
Jesus nodded. “Some wounds do not heal because they are hidden. They begin to heal when they are cleaned.”
Cole looked at Him. “I don’t want a lesson.”
“I know.”
“I want him back.”
Jesus’ face changed again with that deep sorrow Cole had glimpsed before. “Yes.”
The simplicity of the answer broke something in Cole that all the shouting had not broken. He lowered his head, and for a moment he wept without sound. He did not sob like a man giving up. He wept like a man whose body had no strength left to hold back the truth. Jesus did not touch him in a way that would make the moment visible to others. He only stayed beside him, guarding the dignity of grief in a place where dignity was often stripped down to what was real.
When Cole could breathe again, he wiped his face with the back of his wrist, smearing salt, sand, and tears into one indistinguishable thing. “Does forgiveness mean I stop missing him?”
“No,” Jesus said. “Forgiveness means guilt no longer gets to decide what love must become.”
Cole let that sentence enter him slowly. It did not make him whole. It did not close the grave. But it gave him a place to stand that was not built out of punishment.
The last stretch of Hell Week did not become easier because Cole had told the truth. In some ways, it became harder. His emotions, once locked down under anger, were now nearer the surface, and fatigue made everything raw. But the crew changed around him. Eli corrected him once when he began to overreach under the boat, and Cole listened. Vance cursed less and counted more. Sutter faltered again and again, but now he answered the next command instead of arguing with the whole future. Jesus moved among them with quiet authority, never taking the instructors’ place, never making Himself the center, simply helping men remain honest under pressure.
When dawn finally came on the last day of Hell Week, it did not feel like rescue at first. It felt like the world slowly admitting it had not ended. The class stood diminished and still alive, men hollowed by exhaustion and held upright by something beyond pride. The Pacific looked almost gentle in the growing light, though every man knew better. The instructors gathered them, and the senior chief looked over what remained.
“You are not SEALs,” he said. His voice was firm, not unkind. “You have not arrived. You have not earned the right to think highly of yourselves. What you have done is prove that we can continue training you. Remember that. Hell Week does not make you finished. It makes you available for the next standard.”
Cole heard it differently than he would have before. Once, he would have wanted Hell Week to make him clean, to burn away failure, to prove something final about Nolan and himself. Now he understood that no suffering, however severe, could become salvation by itself. It could reveal. It could strip. It could teach. But it could not resurrect the dead or forgive the living. Only mercy could do that, and mercy was not the opposite of endurance. It was the truth that made endurance holy.
When the class was released into the next controlled steps of recovery, Cole found Sutter standing near the edge of the grinder, looking at the bell. For a moment Cole feared the week had only delayed him. Then Sutter turned.
“Your brother,” Sutter said, voice rough. “What was his name?”
Cole felt the question enter gently, as if someone had knocked before opening a door. “Nolan.”
Sutter nodded. “I’ll remember that.”
Cole swallowed. “Remember him as more than what happened.”
“I will.”
Jesus stood a little distance away, watching the morning with tired eyes. Cole walked over to Him slowly. Every step hurt. Every part of him wanted sleep. He stopped beside Jesus and looked out toward the water.
“I thought if I made it through this week, I’d feel worthy to breathe again,” Cole said.
Jesus did not answer immediately. The sun broke through a low band of cloud and laid a pale path across the ocean.
“You were given breath before you proved anything,” Jesus said.
Cole closed his eyes. The sentence was almost unbearable.
Behind them, instructors moved with clipboards and purpose. Candidates shuffled under direction. The pipeline continued. First Phase was not over. There would be more tests, more standards, more chances to fail. Second Phase would take them deeper into diving and the quiet discipline of underwater work. Third Phase would carry them toward land warfare and a different kind of burden. Qualification would demand still more. Graduation was a far country.
But for the first time since Nolan died, Cole did not feel that the far country had to answer for the grave behind him. He opened his eyes and watched the water move.
Jesus, still weary from the same week, bowed His head for one brief moment. It was not the final prayer of the story. It was the kind of prayer a man breathes between commands, when the work is not finished and mercy has only begun.
Chapter Five: The Quiet Underwater
Recovery after Hell Week did not feel like victory to Cole. It felt like being returned to his own body after borrowing it from some colder, older world. The controlled recovery period brought food, sleep, medical attention, and the strange tenderness of ordinary movement. Men who had carried boats through hallucination-level fatigue now walked carefully, as if the floor itself might shift beneath them. Feet were tended. Shoulders were checked. Faces that had hardened into survival slowly remembered expression.
No one in the class mistook recovery for arrival. The instructors made sure of that, but so did the silence left by those who were gone. Empty places had a way of teaching without words. The remaining candidates had survived Hell Week, but they were not yet what the pipeline intended to make. First Phase still had standards to meet, and beyond it waited the water in a deeper form.
Cole slept harder than he had ever slept in his life, yet rest did not erase what had happened. If anything, it made the truth sharper. In exhaustion he had said Nolan’s name. In cold and darkness he had told Sutter not to disappear and call it love. Now, with a few hours of sleep inside him and a warm meal settling in his stomach, he had to live as the man who had said it.
That turned out to be harder than speaking.
The days after Hell Week exposed a different weakness in him. While the class returned to training, Cole found himself wanting to reclaim control quietly, without the obvious anger that had once betrayed him. He listened more, corrected less sharply, and worked better under the boat, but inside he still wanted a guarantee. He wanted proof that if he became a better teammate, no one near him would break. He wanted mercy to function like insurance. It did not.
Sutter remained uneven. He had made it through Hell Week, but Second Phase was approaching, and everyone knew that dive training had a way of finding a man’s fear with patient hands. Sutter joked about it too often. Eli noticed. Cole noticed. Jesus noticed without making Sutter feel watched.
When First Phase ended and the class moved forward, the change in focus was immediate. Second Phase carried them into the discipline of combat diving, where noise mattered less and panic had fewer places to hide. The atmosphere shifted from the loud brutality of sand and surf to the quiet severity of pools, equipment, procedures, buddy checks, underwater problem-solving, and the repeated insistence that a man had to remain calm when instinct demanded haste. The ocean was still there, but now the lesson moved beneath the surface. Breath, trust, and procedure became sacred in their own way, not because the equipment was holy, but because careless men could turn small errors into grave danger.
The instructors in Second Phase were different in manner, though not in seriousness. They did not need constant shouting for the water to do its work. Their voices were exact. Their eyes missed little. They taught that confidence underwater was not bravado. It was obedience under restriction. It was the humility to follow procedures every time, even when repetition made pride impatient. It was the discipline to trust a dive buddy more than a private impulse.
Jesus entered that phase as He had entered the others, with full attention. He studied the equipment. He practiced the checks. He listened to instruction as if listening itself were service. When paired with different candidates, He treated each buddy as if that man’s life mattered more than His own convenience. Cole saw Him once after a long pool evolution, kneeling beside a candidate whose hands were shaking with embarrassment after a mistake. Jesus did not excuse the mistake. He helped the man name it clearly, correct the procedure, and return to training without surrendering to shame.
Cole knew by then that this was one of the ways Jesus changed men. He did not remove consequence. He removed the lie that consequence meant abandonment.
During an open-circuit training event in the pool, Cole was paired with Sutter. The pairing was routine, but Cole felt the old tightening in his chest. Sutter’s fear was not dramatic. It lived in the small places, in the way he touched his gear twice too often, in the way his breath changed when instructions became more complex, in the way humor vanished from his face when his mask sealed. Cole wanted to warn him, encourage him, supervise him, and somehow become the wall between Sutter and every possible failure.
Instead, he performed the checks.
“Your strap,” Cole said quietly.
Sutter fixed it. “Got it.”
“Say it, don’t just nod.”
Sutter looked at him, irritated. “Strap corrected.”
“Good.”
The evolution began under close supervision. At first, everything moved cleanly. Water muffled the world and magnified the self. Cole focused on the task, the sequence, the location of his buddy, the feel of his own breathing. Then Sutter hesitated during a required step. Not much. Just enough. Cole saw his eyes widen behind the mask.
The old fear rose again. This time it wore a different face. Not anger. Responsibility. Cole wanted to take over.
But training did not permit one man to steal another man’s learning because fear had made him impatient. Cole signaled as taught, steady and clear. Sutter looked at him, then back to the task. His hands moved too quickly. Cole signaled again, slower. Sutter paused, followed the procedure, and recovered the sequence.
When they surfaced later, Sutter ripped off his mask and drew breath as if he had escaped something larger than water.
“I almost lost it,” he said.
“But you didn’t,” Cole replied.
“I would have if you hadn’t signaled.”
“I was your buddy. That’s the job.”
Sutter looked at him strangely. “You didn’t grab it from me.”
Cole took a long breath. The pool air smelled of chlorine, rubber, wet concrete, and nerves. “I wanted to.”
Sutter almost smiled. “I know.”
Nearby, an instructor called them over and debriefed the evolution. The correction was factual, detailed, and unsentimental. Sutter had rushed. Cole had signaled appropriately but needed to keep his own positioning cleaner. Neither was praised into comfort. Neither was shamed into fear. They were told what was true and sent back to improve.
That night, Cole found Jesus cleaning gear again. It seemed Jesus was always doing some ordinary task with uncommon care. The room was quieter than it had been before Hell Week. Men still joked, but their jokes had changed. They had less performance in them.
“I thought mercy meant stepping in,” Cole said as he sat nearby.
Jesus looked up. “Sometimes.”
“Today it meant not stepping in.”
“Yes.”
Cole rubbed at a sore place on his wrist. “That feels worse.”
“It can feel like love to control what frightens us,” Jesus said. “But love must leave room for another man to obey.”
Cole sat with that. He had spent years wishing he could go back into Nolan’s life and force better choices, better honesty, better outcomes. But even in imagination, he could never decide where love ended and control began. He had wanted to save his brother from pain, but he had also wanted Nolan to prove that Cole’s hardness had not been wrong. That was a truth he still found difficult to face.
“What if leaving room means he fails?” Cole asked.
Jesus folded the cleaned item and set it aside. “Then you tell the truth, remain near if you are permitted, and refuse to make his failure your throne.”
Cole looked at Him. “My throne?”
“The place from which you judge yourself as if you alone held power over life, death, obedience, and another man’s heart.”
Cole went quiet. The words were sharp, but they did not humiliate him. They named the strange pride hidden inside his guilt. He had called himself responsible for everything because part of him would rather be condemned as powerful than forgiven as limited.
Second Phase pressed that lesson deeper. There were classroom hours, pool hours, ocean training, and the repetition of skills until discipline became less dependent on mood. The candidates learned that under the surface, panic was loud even when no sound escaped. A man’s eyes could shout. His hands could confess. His breathing could reveal the state of his soul before his words ever did. Cole began to understand why trust mattered so much. A dive buddy was not an accessory to personal achievement. He was a living reminder that no mission worth doing could be done as a monument to the self.
Jesus moved through that world with a quiet gravity that affected even the instructors, though none of them said so plainly. They still corrected Him. They still held Him to the same standard. Once, after an imperfect equipment setup, an instructor made Him repeat the preparation until every step met the requirement exactly. Jesus received the correction with humility so complete that Cole saw two younger candidates stop smirking at their own private irritation. There was no resentment in Him, and because there was no resentment, correction had nowhere to become shame. It simply became instruction.
By the time the class neared the end of Second Phase, Cole had changed enough for others to trust him and not enough for him to trust the change. That was the honest shape of it. He still woke from brief sleep with Nolan’s name in his mouth. He still felt panic when Sutter struggled. He still wanted pain to purchase certainty. But now he recognized the old movement before obeying it, and sometimes recognition gave him enough room to choose differently.
The final dive-related qualification events of that phase came with pressure that was quieter than Hell Week and, in some ways, more intimate. Cole passed what he needed to pass, not flawlessly, but within the standards required. Sutter passed too, though barely on one event and only after receiving correction that left him pale and furious with himself. Eli remained steady, becoming the kind of teammate men looked for without discussing why.
When the class completed Second Phase and prepared to move into Third Phase, the land seemed different under Cole’s boots. The focus shifted toward weapons, tactics, small-unit movement, navigation, demolitions training under strict controls, patrols, and the disciplined violence of land warfare. The environment widened again, but after the water, Cole felt the deeper lesson follow him. Whether under a boat, beneath the surface, or moving across ground with a team, the question remained the same. Could a man be trusted with others when fear reached for his throat?
Third Phase did not give the class room to become sentimental about surviving the first two. The tempo changed, but the demand remained. Candidates learned systems, safety, communication, movement, and accountability. Mistakes were corrected because mistakes mattered. The instructors spoke often, in their own professional language, about responsibility. Tools were not toys. Aggression without discipline was a liability. Courage without judgment was danger dressed up as virtue.
Cole listened differently now. Before, he would have heard only the warrior part. Now he heard the capable part, the disciplined part, the servant part. A man was not being trained to become hard for hardness’s sake. He was being shaped to enter fearful places without letting fear rule him, to carry lethal responsibility without worshiping it, to protect others without making protection into ego.
One late afternoon during a land navigation exercise, the team moved through rough terrain under a fading sky. Fatigue from weeks of training had become a permanent companion, quieter than Hell Week but always present. Cole was serving in a leadership role for the exercise, responsible for keeping the small element oriented, moving, and communicating. The task demanded attention, not drama.
Halfway through, disagreement rose over the route. Eli believed they needed to adjust west sooner. Sutter thought the terrain feature ahead confirmed their current line. Vance backed Sutter with too much confidence. Cole checked the map, compass, and terrain, feeling the old pressure gather around decision-making. A wrong call would cost time and correction. A hesitant call could cost trust. He wanted certainty before moving, but training often gave men enough information to decide responsibly, not enough to feel invulnerable.
Jesus stood slightly behind and to his right, part of the element, not taking command. His presence did not remove the burden of Cole’s role. That was its own lesson.
Cole looked again at the terrain. Eli was right. Admitting it would be simple, except Sutter and Vance were watching, and some remnant of the old Cole still hated being seen adjusting course.
“We shift west now,” Cole said.
Vance frowned. “You sure?”
“No,” Cole said, surprising himself with the honesty. “I’m responsible. Not omniscient. Based on what we have, we shift west.”
Eli gave a short nod. Sutter adjusted without argument. The team moved.
The route proved correct.
Later, when the exercise was debriefed, the instructor noted the hesitation, the decision, and the communication. He did not make it grand. He only said, “Better to make a disciplined call with humility than a proud call you defend after it’s wrong.”
Cole wrote the sentence down that evening, not because he needed it for a test, but because he needed it for his life.
The pipeline continued toward its later gates, and the men who remained became harder to surprise but easier to humble. They had seen too many strong candidates leave to believe strength alone was enough. They had seen too many small errors multiply to treat details lightly. They had endured too much together to pretend independence was the highest good.
One night near the end of Third Phase, Cole opened the plastic sleeve that held Nolan’s photograph. He had not looked at it since before Hell Week. In the picture, Nolan stood in a driveway with one hand raised against the sun, smiling like the future had not yet learned how to wound him. Cole sat on the edge of his rack and looked until the first wave of grief passed and left him breathing.
Jesus sat across from him, repairing a small tear in a piece of issued fabric with patient hands.
“He would have liked You,” Cole said.
Jesus looked up. “Tell Me about him.”
Cole almost said there was no time, but there was a little. Not much, but enough. For the first time, he told someone about Nolan without beginning at the hospital or ending at the grave. He spoke of his brother’s ridiculous singing voice, his stubborn loyalty, the way he burned pancakes because he always turned the heat too high, the way he wanted to be brave before he knew what bravery cost. He spoke quietly, and Jesus listened as if every ordinary detail mattered.
When Cole finished, the room around them had not changed. The training ahead had not softened. The grief had not vanished. But Nolan had become more than a wound again.
Cole put the photograph away carefully.
“Thank You,” he said.
Jesus tied off the thread and smoothed the repair with His thumb. “Love remembers the whole person.”
Cole nodded, unable to answer.
Outside, Coronado settled into night. The ocean was no longer visible from where Cole sat, but he could feel its presence beyond the buildings, dark and steady. The pipeline was moving toward qualification, toward final evaluations, toward the day when those who remained would stand in a place they had once only imagined. Cole no longer believed graduation could save him. That made him want it more honestly.
He did not need a Trident to forgive himself. He needed to become trustworthy with the life still in his hands.
Chapter Six: The Place Where Mercy Stood
Third Phase ended without giving the men permission to romanticize themselves. By then, the class had learned that every completed phase only opened the door to another standard. First Phase had shown them what the body did when cold, pressure, noise, and teamwork stripped away pride. Hell Week had torn the fantasies out of them and left only the question of whether they could be trained further. Second Phase had taught them that the water did not respect confidence unless confidence had been disciplined into procedure. Third Phase had carried them into the field, into weapons safety, land navigation, demolitions training under strict control, small-unit tactics, communications, patrols, and the kind of responsibility that made childish ideas of toughness look dangerous.
Cole had passed, but the word passed no longer sounded simple to him. Passing had cost him more than effort. It had cost him the false comfort of believing that suffering automatically made a man righteous. It had cost him the private throne of guilt. It had cost him the cruel version of brotherhood he had once mistaken for protection. He was still intense. He still moved with purpose. He still demanded much from himself. But the demand had changed. It no longer sounded like Nolan’s ghost accusing him from every failure. It sounded more like duty, and sometimes, when he was honest enough to admit it, like gratitude.
Jesus remained with the class as they moved beyond BUD/S into the qualification portion of the pipeline. The men who had once wondered how He would endure the first day now watched Him with a different kind of quiet. No one treated Him as delicate. No one thought He was untouched by the training. They had seen Him cold, hungry, exhausted, corrected, scraped, soaked, and silent under burdens that made every man’s body rebel. Yet they had also seen that suffering did not make Him smaller. It made the truth of Him more visible.
SEAL Qualification Training brought a wider seriousness. The candidates were no longer merely being screened for the ability to continue. They were being prepared for the responsibilities that would come with the warfare pin some of them had dreamed about for years. The days took them through advanced weapons handling, tactics, communications, combat medicine, survival skills, mission planning, cold-weather and maritime work, close coordination, and the continued testing of judgment under fatigue. They learned that skill without humility was a threat. They learned that aggression without restraint could compromise a team. They learned that courage was not a feeling of invulnerability, but the disciplined willingness to do what had to be done while fear remained present.
Cole listened to that differently than he once would have. Before Coronado, he had imagined elite training as a furnace that would burn away his grief and forge him into a man no longer vulnerable to loss. Now he knew better. The furnace did not remove the human heart. If it did, it would ruin the warrior. The work was not to become unfeeling. The work was to become trustworthy with feeling, trustworthy with fear, trustworthy with pain, trustworthy with the life of another man when the easy thing would be to think only of himself.
During one qualification event late in the pipeline, the small element was tasked with moving through a complex scenario that required planning, communication, movement, medical response, and adaptation when conditions changed. It was not theatrical. The instructors did not need drama. The details were enough. A wrong assumption could break the plan. A missed communication could cost the team. A leader too proud to adjust could turn a manageable problem into a serious failure. Cole had been assigned a leadership role again, and he felt the weight of it settle over him as he reviewed the mission plan with Eli, Sutter, Vance, Jesus, and the others assigned to the element.
The old Cole would have turned the briefing into proof of dominance. He would have spoken quickly, tolerated questions poorly, and treated uncertainty as weakness. The man standing in the dim preparation area now had the same sharp eyes and the same strong voice, but he had learned to make room for the truth to come from someone else.
Eli questioned the route timing. Sutter noticed a communication gap. Vance, still rough around the edges but steadier than before, pointed out that one contingency was unclear. Cole listened to each one. He corrected what needed correcting. He kept the plan tight without protecting his own pride from revision. Jesus stood with them, not taking over, not drawing their attention away from the task, but His presence had become like a level held against a beam. Around Him, crooked things became harder to pretend were straight.
When the event began, the plan held for a while. The team moved with discipline. Communication stayed clean. Then the scenario changed, as everyone knew it eventually would. A simulated casualty forced a decision under time pressure. The terrain and timing no longer matched what they had expected. Sutter, assigned to a critical support role, froze for half a second when two demands collided at once.
Half a second was not failure. It was only the place failure could begin.
Cole saw it. Every old instinct surged toward him. Take control. Push him aside. Save the outcome. Protect the team from the weak link. In that instant, he felt the same old fear, but now he recognized its voice. It no longer sounded like wisdom. It sounded like panic wearing armor.
“Sutter,” Cole said, clear and controlled, “your next step.”
Sutter blinked once.
Cole did not soften the standard. “Your next step. Say it and move.”
Sutter answered, voice rough but present, and executed the task. Eli filled the communication gap. Jesus shifted to assist within the role assigned to Him, precise and calm, never stealing another man’s responsibility. The team adapted. The event continued. There were mistakes, and the instructors found them all. There were corrections, and the team received them. But the element did not fracture, and Cole did not become cruel in order to feel safe.
During the debrief, the instructor looked directly at him. “Mercer, you had a moment where you could have overridden your man.”
“Yes, Instructor.”
“Why didn’t you?”
Cole stood straight, tired in the deep way that had become normal. “Because he still had the task, Instructor. My job was to bring him back to it, not take it from him.”
The instructor held his gaze for a moment. “That answer had better survive real pressure.”
“Yes, Instructor.”
There was no praise after that, but Cole no longer needed every truth to come wrapped in approval. The correction itself was a gift. The warning was a gift. He understood by then that being trusted did not mean being spared hard words. It meant being given the truth while there was still time to become better.
After the event, Sutter found him near the gear area. The evening was cold, and the sky over the training grounds had begun to darken. Sutter looked older than he had at the start of BUD/S, though only months had passed. They all did.
“You could have taken over,” Sutter said.
“I know.”
“You didn’t.”
“No.”
Sutter looked down at his hands, then back up. “I heard you. When you said next step, I heard you. Not like Hell Week, exactly. Different. But I heard you.”
Cole nodded. “Good.”
Sutter hesitated. “Your brother would be proud of you.”
The words struck so unexpectedly that Cole almost turned away. For a long time, that sentence would have been unbearable because he would have needed it too much and believed it too little. Now it landed with pain, but it did not crush him. He could receive it without making it prove everything.
“I hope he would know I loved him,” Cole said.
Jesus, who had been passing nearby with gear in His hands, stopped quietly. Sutter did not speak. The wind moved across the open space with a thin edge of cold.
Cole looked toward Jesus. “I used to think love meant making him strong enough that nothing could hurt him. I think maybe love should have meant being near enough that he did not have to hide what already hurt.”
Jesus’ eyes were steady and filled with sorrow that did not despair. “That is a hard truth.”
Cole breathed in slowly. “Yes.”
“And it is not the end of love.”
Cole looked down. For once, he did not argue with mercy.
The final weeks of qualification carried them through more instruction, more evaluations, and more chances for hidden weaknesses to surface under load. They jumped when required, trained in mission planning, refined skills, and learned again that elite did not mean independent of correction. They were shaped by repetition and consequence, by instructors who had seen enough to know that a man’s character mattered as much as his endurance. Cole watched Jesus through those weeks and understood something he had missed at the beginning. Jesus never used humility to avoid responsibility. He did not seek the lowest place because He feared authority or action. He sought it because love had no need to climb over others in order to be strong.
There were moments when the class laughed together, and the laughter surprised them by being clean. There were moments when men who had once measured each other as competition now moved as if the other’s success mattered. There were still conflicts. Fatigue still made tempers short. Fear still found new disguises. But the center of Cole’s life had shifted. He no longer came to every hard thing asking it to punish him enough to make him worthy. He came asking whether he could be faithful inside it.
On the final night before graduation, Cole took Nolan’s photograph outside. Coronado was quiet in the way a military place becomes quiet when the day’s work has moved indoors but the discipline of it remains in the air. The ocean was dark beyond the lights. He stood where he had once stared at the bell and wanted to turn grief into steel. The bell was still there. It had not changed. Cole had.
Jesus came to stand beside him.
For a while, neither spoke. Cole held the photograph carefully, not hidden, not displayed, simply held. The young man in the picture smiled into sunlight that belonged to another life.
“I kept thinking I had to finish this for him,” Cole said.
Jesus looked at the photograph. “And now?”
“Now I think I had to stop using him as the reason I refused to heal.”
The words were plain, and because they were plain, they felt true.
Jesus said, “Healing does not mean the love was small.”
Cole nodded. “I know that now. Some days I know it better than others.”
“That is often how men learn to walk.”
Cole looked at the bell, then back to the water. “I don’t forgive myself all at once.”
“No.”
“But I don’t hate myself the same way.”
Jesus’ face softened. “That is not a small mercy.”
Cole folded the photograph back into its sleeve. His hands were still rough from training, the skin marked by months of work. He thought about Nolan’s hands, younger hands, always restless, always reaching for a future he believed would name him brave. Cole wished he could tell him that he had been loved before proving anything. He wished he had known how to say it then. He could not go back. That truth still hurt. But he no longer believed the only honest response to that hurt was punishment.
The next morning arrived with a clear sky and a quiet weight over everything. Graduation did not erase the pipeline behind them. It gathered it. Families, leaders, instructors, teammates, and the remaining men stood inside a ceremony that carried more meaning because everyone present knew something of what it had cost. The uniforms were clean now. Faces were shaved. Boots were polished. But beneath the order and dignity of the day lived the memory of surf, sand, cold, darkness, correction, failure, endurance, and the countless unseen decisions that had brought these men to this place.
Cole stood in formation with the others who had made it through. Eli was there. Sutter was there. Vance was there. Jesus stood among them, not above them, wearing the same uniform, bearing the same long road in the quiet way He bore all things. Cole glanced down the line once and felt something close to wonder. Not pride alone, though pride was present in its rightful place. Not relief alone, though relief moved through him like warmth. It was gratitude, and gratitude felt stronger than the anger that had once held him together.
The ceremony moved with formal dignity. Words were spoken about standards, sacrifice, responsibility, country, team, and the warfare community these men were entering. The instructors did not become sentimental, but their seriousness carried its own respect. No one suggested that graduation made the men invincible. If anything, the weight of the day made clear that the pin was not a trophy for private glory. It was a sign of trust, and trust was heavier than admiration.
When the Trident was placed on Cole, the moment did not feel like the absolution he once would have demanded from it. It felt like a charge. He thought of Nolan, and the grief came, but it did not come alone. It came with memory, love, sorrow, mercy, and the strange peace of knowing that his brother’s life could be honored without being turned into a chain.
When Jesus received His Trident, the room seemed to still in a way no command had ordered. He bowed His head slightly, not in performance, but in reverence. The pin rested against His uniform, a symbol of a warrior path He had entered voluntarily, humbly, and without ever ceasing to be a servant. Cole looked at Him and understood that Jesus had not come through the pipeline to prove He was strong. He had come to show what strength was for.
After the ceremony, there were embraces, photographs, handshakes, and the tired, astonished smiles of men who had not allowed themselves to imagine the day too fully until it arrived. Cole found Eli first, then Sutter, then Vance. The handshakes turned into brief embraces because some things could not be said well enough with words. Sutter held on for an extra second, and Cole let him.
Finally, Cole stepped away from the noise and found Jesus near the edge of the gathering, where He seemed to be both fully present and untouched by the desire to be noticed. For a moment, Cole could not speak. Months earlier, silence between them had felt like exposure. Now it felt like room.
“I wanted this to save me,” Cole said.
Jesus looked at him with the same steady mercy that had met him beside the bell on the first day.
“And what has saved you?” Jesus asked.
Cole’s eyes moved over the place, the men, the instructors, the families, the ocean beyond all of it. “Not this. Not the suffering. Not proving myself.” He swallowed. “You did not take the grief away.”
“No.”
“You stayed in it with me.”
Jesus did not answer with words. He did not need to.
Cole breathed in, and the breath no longer felt stolen. “I still miss him.”
“Yes.”
“I still wish I had done some things differently.”
“Yes.”
“But I can love the men in front of me now.”
Jesus’ face held both joy and sorrow, as if He knew the cost of every word. “Then your brother’s memory is no longer being used only to wound you.”
Cole nodded slowly. “It can teach me.”
“Yes,” Jesus said. “And love that teaches mercy has not been lost.”
The day moved on around them. Names were called. Photographs were taken. Men laughed with families who would never fully know the cold nights, the hidden prayers, the private breaking, or the fragile beginnings of healing that had happened between commands. That was all right. Not everything holy needed an audience.
Before leaving, Cole walked once more to the place where the bell stood. He did not touch it. He did not hate it now. It had told the truth every day without speaking. It had offered an ending to men who could choose no more, and it had stood near the beginning of his own surrender. He looked at it for a long moment, then took Nolan’s photograph from his pocket.
“You were more than your dream,” Cole whispered. “I’m sorry I forgot that.”
He held the photograph against his chest, then put it away.
When he turned, Jesus was walking toward the beach.
Cole did not follow at first. He watched as Jesus moved past the buildings, past the signs of training and ceremony, past the place where men had been tested in body and soul. The Pacific was bright under the late light now, restless as ever. Jesus stepped onto the sand and went to the waterline where He had prayed before the first day began.
There, with the sound of the surf moving in and out, Jesus knelt.
He was no longer surrounded by the class. He was no longer under the shouted command of instructors. The ceremony had ended, and the men had begun to step into whatever came next. But Jesus bowed His head as He had in the beginning, hands open before His Father, praying quietly over the beach, the bell, the instructors, the graduates, the men who had left, the families who had waited, the brother who was gone, and the wounded places in living men that mercy had not abandoned.
The tide came close, then drew back. The evening light rested on the water. Jesus remained in quiet prayer.
Your friend, Douglas Vandergraph
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from 下川友
駅に着くと、生暖かい風が吹いていた。草木が萌えている。それなのに風はいつも少しの不安になる寒気を連れてくる。たぶんこれが秋の表面の下にあるものなのだろう。
毎回同じ紺色のカーディガンを着ていた。それが自分を安心させる。けれどその安心自体も、どこかずれている気がする。安心できるということに、違和感がある。
実家の食卓に着くと、フォークを凝視してしまう。理由は分からない。フォークの歯が、じっとこちらを見ている。たぶんずっと前からそうだった。私が気づいていなかっただけだ。
窓の外にすすきが揺れている。秋になれば生えて、家族連れがやってくる。すすきの穂の色が、空を少しずつ浸食していく。土の匂いが立ち込めていて、それは自分の皮膚に合っている気がした。またこの3人かという思いが喉まで上がって、飲み込んだ。
母親が何か動作をした。それを鼻で笑ってしまう。笑った後で、やりすぎたと思う。笑い声はもう戻せない。空気に溶けて、どこかへ消えた。
気になる人はいますか、と聞かれた。分からない、と答える。本当に分からなかった。そのとき自分が、この質問に答えられないことに気づいた。私には気になる人がいるか分からないのだ。
夜になって、ベランダに出る。手すりに指を置く。空が暗くなると、自分にとっては明確に見えるものがある。月が浮かんでいる。僕たちがいなくなった瞬間からあなたは急激に成長しますよ — そんな声が風に乗ってきた気がする。自分がいなくなった後、私はどうなるのだろう。もうとっくにそうなっているのかもしれない。
月に、お前はいつになったら会えるのか、と投げかける。答えはない。さっきの窪みを私への質問箱にしよう。ベランダを後にする。
from
Blatta Passiflora
Desperté con la certeza de estar pidiendo asilo en Polonia. Me soñé buscando documentos, firmando algunos otros en varias oficinas, hablando con personas a las cuales nunca les vi el rostro, solo los zapatos brillantes sobre el suelo de baldosas perfectamente cuadradas, conté las baldosas y llegué hasta 44. No me gustan los números pares, la pesadilla.
Dormí un poco más de diez horas, quizá porque cambié la cama y la cortina o porque dejé la zopi. Me desperté para sentir de golpe el aroma penetrante de mi almohada y mi cama, huelen a romero y cedro, sobre todo a romero. Un señor de una botica, el señor Luis, me vende el aceite, mi extenso ritual nocturno incluye ponerme unas cuantas gotas en el cabello.
Días atrás, en un café que olía yerbabuena, un amigo (más de una década de amistad pero a quien no veía hace varios años) mencionó lo largo que tenía mi cabello y lo “negrísimo” que aún seguía, le mostré mis canas. Él me conoció con mi cabello corto, siempre lo llevé corto, de hecho, la primera vez que me vio yo no tenía cabello, tenía 17 años y había decidido pasar un máquina eléctrica sobre mi cabeza. Yo a él lo conocí con el cabello corto, con piel muy blanca y con una risa igual de escandalosa a la mía. Ahora, él lleva el cabello largo, sobre sus hombros, es rizado, ondas sinuosas de color castaño que caen y lo adornan. Su inteligencia y su increíble talento para hablar siguen intactos.
S. me dijo que tres años atrás optó por dejarse crecer el cabello y que ahora se sentía poderoso, rebelde, “la marica más portentosa del mundo” dijo entre una caracajada demencial y coqueta. Entonces, S. se transformó en Kali, y lo vi adornado con cabezas, con pequeños brazos atados a su cintura sobre su pantalón de oficina color café, lo vi con sus rizos castaños despeinados y poseídos. S. se volvió sagrado y rabioso. “Se me apareció la diosa Kali” me repetía, mientras la luz de una bombilla se filtraba por ocasiones entre aquel matorral castaño y rizado. ¿A qué obedece esta aparición?
Pienso en el milagro, en las maldiciones, en la aparición de Kali. Kali no tiene olores aromáticos, aunque podría oler a yerbabuena, o ese ser el aroma que antecede su aparición. Kali huele a sangre, a menstruación y tiene la luz y la rabia en el cabello. Se me apareció Kali en un café para hablarme de la muerte, para recordarme la santa rabia, para susurrarme entre risas máximas políticas. Kali me hizo notar que no corto mi cabello desde la muerte de mi madre. La visita de Kali me hizo concluir que mi cabello es mi unión sagrada con la muerte, es mi símbolo de amor con mi madre y mi hermana, las únicas mujeres que me han trenzado. Yo aromatizo a la muerte con romero y argan. Yo cuido a la muerte y la corto un poco, como se hace con las plantas, en las noches de luna creciente, para que crezca aún más, para que sea fuerte y hermosa. Yo adorno a la muerte con flores tejidas de color rojo y púrpura, con lazos de seda gris, con pequeñas piezas de metal. Yo lavo a la muerte con tierra y las mieles de la zingiber. Yo le hago mimos a la muerte, la cuido del sol en días calurosos y la dejo libre bajo el rocío y la lluvia porque sé que ama la humedad. Yo dejo que la muerte se agite al ritmo del sexo cuando estoy sobre un hombre. Yo cultivo a la muerte, negra y aromática, sobre mí. Qué hermosa la muerte. La inmensa divinidad que trae la muerte.