from Crónicas del oso pardo

Hay quienes dicen que cuando me conocen notan algo.

¿Es posible que usted lo hubiera notado? Lo dudo. Tengo experiencia y sé que no se me nota.

Soy buen actor. En el teatro universitario hice papeles dramáticos. Aquí donde me ve fui Laertes dos temporadas. También hice el monólogo del Informe de Kafka, en sustitución del gran Dubois, en el teatro viejo de Portland, una joya arquitectónica.

De modo que tengo experiencia. Si digo que no se me nota, es porque me atengo a los hechos, a lo que se refleja en un espejo.

Otra cosa es que me diga que ha leído mi mente. Pero sobre esto le diré que mi difunta madre lo intentó, y ni siquiera tuvo la más mínima sospecha. Y eso que alardeaba de sus poderes.

Me da completamente igual lo que las personas piensen de mí, porque comprendo que están en problemas y me proyectan sus turbios asuntos.

En todo caso habrá que despedirse. Está agonizante y yo tengo que cumplir mi parte del contrato.

No luche, relájese y descanse.

 
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from The Europe–China Monitor

The Ireland Sino Institute, also operating as the Europe Sino Institute (ESI), has entered into a news service partnership with CCTV+, a Beijing-based global video news provider affiliated with China Central Television.

The agreement represents a significant step in the Institute’s expanding media activities and underscores its broader mission to promote communication and mutual understanding between Europe and China through non-profit initiatives and cross-cultural collaboration.

With contributors and correspondents located across Europe and China, the Institute believes the partnership will open up new opportunities to broaden its reporting capabilities. It is also expected to enhance both the quality and global reach of its content, particularly through joint production initiatives across digital platforms.

The organisation has previously collaborated with CGTN and China Daily, and reports that it has published more than 300 videos across platforms such as Instagram, YouTube, X, and LinkedIn. These productions aim to provide international audiences with honest, balanced, multidimensional, and first-hand insights into China.

According to the Institute, its media work has been conducted on a non-profit basis, aligned with its wider objective of fostering meaningful connections between Europe and China, while encouraging dialogue, cultural exchange, and long-term cooperation.

The new agreement with CCTV+ is described by the organisation as an important milestone that will support future content development and further strengthen its contribution to people-to-people engagement between Europe and China.

https://youtu.be/C0OaQEirsWI?si=LQ5Nc6L2uLV7VbDH

 
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from An Open Letter

Holy shit she continued to Trauma dump and just doesn’t have the awareness to recognize what she is doing, and I honestly just feel sympathy for her but at the same time I less less want to be her friend if I’m being honest. I think loneliness is a trap because people trying to get out of it look for a quick solution in the form of someone, and it doesn’t really work that way, it’s more of a gradual process that takes consistent efforts from different directions. I feel like recently with both of the women I was at one point interested in, it became a parent that they are not exactly happy with their lives as is, and I think they see me as a way to improve that. And I want to remind myself about how a relationship has a foundation in both of the people, and for the relationship to be a good one it needs both of the people to be happy with their lives as is.

 
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from ThruxBets

A couple I like today, and still waiting for my first winner … !

6.15 Musselburgh The one who made most appeal here was the Jim Goldie trained KELPIE GREY. The 6yo ticks plenty of boxes to make him an each bet for me; he’s won twice at the track, over the trip and on the going. Paul Mulrenna gets on really well with him (14/3/8p), has run well last twice on his seasonal reappearances (a 1st and a 2nd most recently) and is on a very attractive being 7lbs lower than his last win. KELPIE GREY // 0.5pt E/W @ 8/1 (Bet365) BOG

6.45 Musselburgh And in the last there’s another each way play in the form of NORTHERN SPIRIT who is a fairly straight forward selection in so much as he has plenty going for him, from a good mark, in an open looking race. He’s been running with credit in better races than this on the turf previously and if he can get away with the rest of them (has dwelt on occasion) then for me he has a great each way chance. NORTHERN SPIRIT // 0.5pt E/W @ 8/1 5 Places (William Hill) BOG

 
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from Lastige Gevallen in de Rede

De daders op missie (alom geposteerd)

Wij zijn de daders wij doen de dingen waarover we preken en zingen we doen daden bemannen raden vullen in en overladen wij maken staken hangen daaraan een wapperend laken we leggen wegen en paden en banen we geven deze daden onze zegen we vreten we kanen happen en kauwen we zweren bij getrouwen die opstaan voor bouwen tillen ploeteren gewichten dragen voor hoge bedragen we zijn de daders onze missie is werken aan oprichten van kerken de leegte opvullen het gemis met prullen pullen en spullen een grote stenen zak met hoge spitse toorn de verstijfde pik ontworpen voor hen die ons behoren behagen en bekoren elke keer telkens weer op ons teer verteren in het verleden verkeren met herhaling in vertaling u de lessen leren binnen onze kaders we zijn daders doen dingen waarover u moet zingen teksten over schrijven handelingen bedrijven tot u helemaal gaat verstijven wij u dagelijks bedwingen het lijf binnendringen onze woorden zijn oorden zijn daden onze daden laten u opladen inladen en aanraden bijspringen en oplichten uitwringen afdichten dan weer open gaan we beschermen ons alles ermee in beslag genomen lucht op land en zee vullen u gedachten met gefabriceerde dromen we zenden en stralen laten u onze zin betalen wegzetten dan oprotten en verhaal halen onze missie zit in een kruik of kissie wij de lijn en de haken u het vissie we blijven jagen aandacht vragen aanwezig zijn op elk fysiek en virtueel plein we laten u turen laseren en lezen op elkaars lijf vuren beste bestrijder in onze ere dienst belijdend aan ons frontje eredienst bewezen met het mondje of een kiesrondje het masker van ons heden copy paste het verleden opzettelijk opgezet verplicht gedragen via cultuur wet en het werkend net over de bodem schrapend met alle middelen mogelijk meegedeeld aan alle leden u moet u energie besteden aan onze daden er mee overladen er in badend overlevend, lijdend, ploeterend binnen de opgetuigde zinnen onze bedijkte en ommuurde grenzen rondom gecultiveerd wensen valse dromen oogsten producten smeden voor nieuwe leden monumenten van centen voor op gemetselde dikke lange poten ten bate van de allerhoogste onze beloning voor u gedienstigheid lijden vast onderdeel van ons beleid levend offer op het altaar zijn ter ere van daders groot en klein leven in gevulde hokjes in afgemeten blokjes tot mededader omgezet wij zijn overal altijd het hier en daar voor u ons dienend leven in verzonnen wil en bijbehorende wet

 
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from Lastige Gevallen in de Rede

ruklame VVA Maatschappelijke ladders, de nieuwste modellen, in wel vijf verschillende kleuren. Mooi om te bestijgen, ook te koop in handzaam formaat zodat u onze unieke omroep ladder overal waar nodig kan betreden. De treden zijn vooraf ingesleten, alles er op en er aan is bij aanschaf al lang en breed afgesteld u moet alleen nog omhoog. Laat anderen zien hoe hoog u kunt klimmen op onze geweldige VVA maarschappelijke ladder, waar u staat als u er op staat en hoe! Als u eenmaal de gewenste positie op de ladder heeft bereikt zijn alle middelen daar om dit te verkondigen aan iedereen die het moet weten, zelfs aan hen die nog niet weten dat ze het moeten horen en zien. Te koop bij de VVA web winkel. De eerste drie treden gratis! Haal meteen op en betaal later in 1001 termijnen. Koop nu en zit er een leven lang mee opgescheept, lekker welvarend. Komt zoals te doen gebruikelijk met heel heel heel veel extra poespas. In het verleden gemaakte stappen op oude versies van onze ladders zijn mogelijk niet compatibel met de nieuwste modellen maar vrees niet u kunt gewoon opnieuw beginnen met klimmen.

 
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from 3c0

“Please add these songs to the wedding playlist,” your sister wrote. That wedding is long gone so you deleted the draft reply where you suggested songs from The Parent Trap soundtrack—the one with Lindsay Lohan.

There is also a letter to your ex-boyfriend’s family. “Thank you for everything. You will always have a place in my heart.” You thought this would remain true, but it is a truth that has taken a different shape.

There was another letter questioning an old flame. “In retrospect, I should've. We've been very up front about everything, what makes this part any different?”

This looked like it was meant to be a blog post:_ “Three years is hard to “separate into pieces”. It's difficult to splinter yourself from a person who has affected and influenced your life and outlook for more than a thousand days. Yes, a thousand days. I calculated. Three years is a long time. That's about 24,000 hours.”_

From having 84 dead drafts—the Drafts folder is now empty.

 
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from AiAngels

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from AiAngels

Meet your perfect black hair AI girlfriend on AI Angels — the most advanced AI companion platform in 2026.

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from AiAngels

Meet your perfect brunette AI girlfriend on AI Angels — the most advanced AI companion platform in 2026.

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from AiAngels

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A redhead AI girlfriend is an AI-powered virtual companion with a fiery red-haired appearance and a personality that is passionate, adventurous, and boldly honest. On AI Angels, you can customize every aspect of your companion — from her look to her conversation style.

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from AiAngels

What Is a Brunette Ai Girlfriend?

A brunette AI girlfriend is an AI-powered virtual companion with a dark-haired appearance and a personality that is intelligent, grounded, and deeply caring. On AI Angels, you can customize every aspect of your companion — from her look to her conversation style.

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She combines sharp wit with genuine warmth. Your brunette AI girlfriend loves meaningful conversations, remembers your stories, and offers thoughtful advice when you need it most.

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from Douglas Vandergraph

Before the sun had fully climbed over the river, while the dark still held to the edges of Memphis and the city had not yet decided what kind of day it was going to be, Jesus knelt in quiet prayer at Tom Lee Park. The Mississippi moved beside Him with that old heavy patience it had carried long before any bridge crossed it and long before anyone put a name on the city that stood beside it. He was still there in the hush of that hour, head bowed, hands open, calm as if nothing in the world was rushing Him, when a woman in a gray sedan parked thirty yards away put both hands over her face and tried not to make a sound. She had done this before. She knew how to cry without moving her shoulders too much. She knew how to stop before the tears ruined the mascara she had put on in a dark bathroom while her father called her name from the living room and asked for coffee even though he had not remembered yet that she had not slept. Her phone lit up again on the passenger seat. ALANA. She let it ring until it stopped, then watched it light up all over again. On the third time she answered and said, “What now,” before her sister could say hello.

Her name was Patrice Carver, and by that hour she had already been awake for almost twenty-two hours if anybody was counting honestly. She had closed the night before at Central Station, gotten home after midnight, found her father sitting in his recliner with the television on and the front door unlocked, paid half an electric bill she could not really afford, listened to her grown son leave a voicemail asking if she could help him one more time, then laid down for an hour and given up on sleep altogether. Alana’s voice came through sharp and tired and already angry. Their father had missed another appointment because Patrice had forgotten to text over the insurance card photo. Patrice said she had forgotten because she was working and because she was also the one cooking his food and washing his clothes and checking whether he had taken his pills and because people kept talking to her like she was three different women living in three different houses with three different paychecks. Alana said that was exactly the problem, that Patrice acted like nobody else knew how to do anything. Patrice looked out through the windshield while her sister spoke and saw Jesus rise from prayer beside the river. His face was peaceful. It unsettled her more than shouting would have. She said one thing too hard. Alana said one thing meaner. Then Patrice ended the call with a hand that trembled harder than she wanted to admit.

She sat there another moment and stared at the steering wheel as if it had offended her personally. Her shift would start soon. Her feet already hurt. Her head felt hot behind the eyes. There was a time in her life when she would have called what she felt sadness, but she had moved past plain sadness months ago. This was something flatter than that. This was being worn down so long that even your panic started to come in tired waves. When she finally pushed open the car door, she did it because sitting still felt worse than moving. She stepped out into the cool morning air and hugged her arms around herself. She was not there to take in the river or the open sky or anything beautiful. She had parked there because it was close and because sometimes she needed five quiet minutes before crossing into the polished lobby and soft music and smiling obligation of the hotel. She walked toward the river without really meaning to, stopped near the path, and bent her head. That was when she heard footsteps, slow and unhurried, not trying to interrupt her and not trying to avoid her either. When she looked up, Jesus was near enough now that she could see the kindness in His eyes before He had spoken a word.

“You have been carrying more than your body was made to hold,” He said.

Patrice almost laughed, though nothing about her felt like laughing. “You don’t even know me.”

“I know you are tired in places sleep has not reached.”

There was no sharpness in His voice. He did not say it like He was proving something. He said it like He was placing a hand on the truth and not squeezing it. Patrice looked away first because the strange thing was not that He had guessed right. The strange thing was that she did not feel cornered by Him. Most people who saw through her did it so they could give advice. They wanted to fix her or use her or make her confess something. This man spoke as if her pain was not a spectacle. It was just something He had noticed because He was paying attention. She should have walked away. She knew that. She had no time for men with mysterious calm at sunrise. She had a shift to get to and bills to think about and a father who might leave the stove on if she forgot to call him at noon. Still, she stayed. “I’m fine,” she said, because habit was quicker than honesty.

Jesus glanced toward South Main as if the streets were already telling Him what the day would ask of everyone walking them. “No,” He said, and there was not a trace of accusation in it. “You are functioning.”

That landed harder than she wanted it to. Patrice pressed her lips together and looked at the river, then back at Him. “That’s close enough.”

“It is not the same thing.”

She felt something tighten in her throat. “I have to work.”

“I know.”

He started walking toward the street, not assuming she would follow. For reasons she could not yet explain, Patrice fell into step beside Him. The city was waking up around them now. Light was beginning to move across the pavement. A truck rumbled somewhere farther up the road. The sound of a train felt distant and close at the same time, the way it does in a city that has learned to live with motion. They crossed toward South Main, and Patrice found herself talking in short unwilling bursts. She told Him she worked guest services at Central Station. She told Him her father lived with her now because living alone was no longer safe. She said her son was twenty-four and old enough to know better, which was the kind of sentence mothers say when worry has hardened into irritation. She said her sister liked to show up angry after Patrice had already handled the hard part. She did not mean to say any of it. The words simply kept leaving her. Jesus listened without interrupting. When they passed the corner and the familiar front of the Arcade Restaurant came into view, the smell of coffee and cooking drifted out into the morning air. Patrice slowed without wanting to admit she had noticed.

“When did you last eat something that was not standing over a sink?” Jesus asked.

She frowned. “I don’t know.”

“That is too long.”

“I don’t have time.”

He turned and looked at her fully. “Then your trouble has started deciding what your body is allowed to need.”

Patrice let out a breath that was close to anger. “I do not have the luxury right now to sit and have some peaceful breakfast like the world is not on fire.”

Jesus opened the door of the Arcade and held it for her. “Sit anyway.”

She should have kept moving. The clock in her head was loud. Her manager, Denise, noticed lateness the way bloodhounds notice a trail. Her phone still had that unpaid bill notice in it. Her father would be awake soon. But the truth was she had not been invited to sit in a very long time. She was usually the one bringing things, fixing things, carrying things, remembering things. Nobody looked at her like rest was a thing she was still permitted to have. So she went in almost defensively, as if she was only doing it to prove she could leave any second she wanted. The warmth inside hit her first. Then the clink of plates. Then the ordinary mercy of people already living their small morning lives without asking anything from her. A waitress with tired kind eyes and silver hoops in her ears gave Patrice a quick look of recognition. “Girl, you look like the night fought back,” she said.

“It did,” Patrice answered.

Jesus smiled at the waitress. “Would you bring her something warm and strong, and food enough to quiet the shaking in her hands.”

Patrice looked down. She had not even realized her fingers were trembling against the menu. The waitress did not make a show of it. “I got you,” she said softly, and walked off.

They sat in a booth near the window where South Main moved past in slow morning strokes. Patrice kept expecting Jesus to launch into some speech that would make her regret staying, but He only sat there with the kind of presence that made it easier to breathe. When the coffee came, she wrapped both hands around the mug and closed her eyes for one second. It was almost enough to make her cry again, and that annoyed her. She did not want to be moved by coffee. She did not want to be moved by kindness. Both felt too dangerous when your life depended on staying upright. Jesus waited until she took a few sips. “Who is the first person everybody calls when something slips?” He asked.

She gave a humorless smile. “Me.”

“And when you begin to slip?”

She looked out the window. “I don’t.”

Jesus did not rush to answer. “No,” He said after a moment. “You hide it.”

That made her jaw set. “You talk like you know everything.”

“I speak only what I see.”

“And what do you see.”

He held her gaze with a steadiness that did not feel invasive. “I see a woman who has mistaken being needed for being loved. I see someone who has been dependable for so long that the people around her have stopped asking whether she is hurting. I see anger you are ashamed of and grief you have postponed until it became part of your posture.”

The food came before Patrice could answer, and she was grateful for the interruption because the man across from her had just said things she had not put into words for herself. She ate slowly at first, then with the quiet urgency of somebody whose body had been ignored too long. Jesus let her. The waitress checked in once, then left them alone. A family with two children laughed in a booth behind them. Someone at the counter was talking about traffic. Normal life went on, and Patrice hated how much she needed that normal sound around her in order to keep from breaking open. After a while she said, “My mother died four years ago. Since then everything has been on me. My father was never the same after that. My son started drifting. My sister got angry at the whole family and started staying away. I kept waiting for something to settle down so I could breathe again, but it just kept becoming something else.”

Jesus nodded. “And so you made an altar out of endurance.”

Patrice looked up sharply. He said it so simply that she knew He meant it, and the plainness of it was what cut. She had never thought of herself as worshiping anything but duty can put on holy clothes if nobody questions it. She chewed once and set her fork down. “What was I supposed to do,” she asked. “Let it all fall apart.”

He was quiet for a moment. Then He said, “Some things are already fraying because you have been holding them alone.”

She wanted to argue with that, but she could not. She thought of her father repeating the same story three times in one evening. She thought of DeShawn’s voice in that voicemail, all pride on the surface and panic underneath. She thought of Alana speaking with that old hurt she always hid under irritation. She thought of her own apartment, neat enough for company, too tense for peace. When she finished eating, she felt stronger and somehow sadder too, because now the numbness had eased just enough for feeling to come back. Jesus stood when she stood. Together they walked the short distance to Central Station, and by the time the hotel came into view with its old brick and polished windows and the tracks nearby holding their long history of arrival and leaving, Patrice had already begun to dread stepping back into the version of herself that knew how to smile no matter what.

Inside, the lobby was waking into its day. A man in a blazer rolled two suitcases past the desk. A woman near the seating area was speaking in low frustrated tones into a phone. The faint sound of music drifted through the room. Lionel, the bellman who had worked there longer than Patrice had, lifted his chin in greeting when he saw her. “Morning, Pat.”

“It is that,” she said.

He gave Jesus a curious glance but did not ask anything. Maybe something in Jesus made questions feel less urgent than ordinary courtesy. Patrice slipped behind the desk, signed into the system, and immediately found three notes waiting on her. One room had a maintenance complaint. Another guest wanted late checkout. Denise had left a message reminding staff that the hospitality standard did not change because moods did. Patrice muttered something under her breath and reached for the phone. Jesus did not vanish into the background the way most strangers would have. He stayed in the lobby as if He belonged anywhere compassion was needed. He stood near enough that she could see Him when she lifted her head, and somehow that steadied her more than she wanted to admit.

The morning came at her fast. A man from Little Rock wanted a reservation fixed and spoke to her like she had personally ruined his trip. A young couple had lost a phone charger and needed one immediately because their rideshare to the airport was on the way. An older woman in a navy coat asked twice where the elevators were because she could not hear well over the hum of the lobby. Patrice handled each thing with trained politeness, though by the time the third guest sighed at her like she was an inconvenience, she felt the sharp edge rising in her again. When the older woman looked lost the second time, Jesus stepped toward her before Patrice could move. He did not fuss over her. He simply offered His arm and asked what room she was headed to. The woman took it without hesitation. He walked her to the elevators as though it were the most natural thing in the world to slow down for somebody nobody else had time for. Patrice watched them go and felt an odd heat rise behind her eyes. She had been in that lobby almost three years and had seen dozens of people miss what was right in front of them because they were living inside their own rush. Jesus saw everything like nothing was small.

Her phone buzzed beneath the desk. Dad. Patrice answered in a low voice while typing a guest note with her other hand. Her father asked whether her mother had gone to the store because he had not seen her all morning. Patrice closed her eyes. She had learned not to answer too fast when the confusion came. “Mama’s gone, Daddy,” she said gently. There was a silence on the line. Then he said, with the kind of quiet that only comes when memory returns for a cruel little minute, “That’s right.” Patrice swallowed and looked at the computer screen until it blurred. “There’s oatmeal in the microwave,” she told him. “Eat that and I’ll call you later.” He said all right and hung up. She took one breath and set the phone down, but another call came before she could collect herself. This time it was DeShawn. She let it go to voicemail. A text followed immediately. Need 60. Just till Friday. Patrice stared at the screen with a hard face that hid a thousand softer feelings under it. Jesus had returned from the elevators and was standing near the window. He did not ask about the call. He only looked at her with that same calm attention that felt less like observation and more like shelter.

Near eleven, the woman in the navy coat came back through the lobby with tears in her eyes and asked Patrice if there was a quiet place she could sit. Her husband had died two days earlier. She was in Memphis for the service. She had checked in because it was easier than staying in her daughter’s house with all the casseroles and whispered voices. Patrice almost gave the practiced answer about the seating area near the lounge, but before she could, Jesus pulled out a chair in a corner where the light fell softer and asked the woman if she had eaten. The woman shook her head. Lionel, who had been crossing the lobby with a luggage cart, turned without a word and went to fetch tea from the small service station. Patrice watched all of it and felt something in her chest twist, because the whole scene happened so easily. Nobody announced goodness. Nobody made a speech about compassion. They simply saw her and moved toward her. When Lionel set the tea down, the woman started crying for real. Patrice came out from behind the desk before she even thought about it, crouched beside her, and rested a hand on her shoulder. The woman covered that hand with both of hers and said, “Thank you for touching me like I’m still here.” Patrice could not answer. That sentence went straight through her.

When the rush thinned for a moment, she stepped into the back office and leaned against the wall. The room smelled faintly of printer toner and stale air. Denise had gone upstairs. Nobody was back there with her. Patrice took out her phone and listened to DeShawn’s voicemail because avoiding it had begun to feel like its own burden. He sounded tired. Not manipulative tired. Real tired. He said he knew she was mad and knew he had asked too many times, but something had happened and he needed her to call. No explanation. No big story. Just that flat fear people get in their voice when their options have started to shrink. Patrice deleted nothing. She put the phone down and pressed both palms into her eyes until colors flashed in the dark. Jesus was standing in the doorway when she lowered her hands. He did not enter until she nodded.

“You answer everyone,” He said. “Even when you resent them for needing you.”

“That’s motherhood,” she said.

“It is one form of it.”

Patrice crossed her arms. “He is twenty-four.”

“He is still your son.”

She stared at the floor for a moment. “You say that like it helps.”

“No,” Jesus said. “I say it because you keep trying to turn pain into accounting. You measure who has taken too much. You measure who showed up and who disappeared. You measure how many times you were the one left holding what other people dropped. But love is suffocating under all your counting.”

She looked up fast, offended because it was true. “So I’m just supposed to keep letting everybody drain me.”

“Not drain you. Tell the truth.”

Patrice laughed once, bitter and small. “Truth is nobody does what they should. Truth is my father is fading in front of me. Truth is my sister likes blaming me more than helping me. Truth is my son keeps finding ways to become my emergency. Truth is I am one late bill away from lights out and one bad week away from losing my mind.”

Jesus stepped closer, and in that tight room with its fluorescent hum and stacked supply boxes, He looked no less holy for being surrounded by ordinary things. If anything, the ordinary made Him feel nearer. “And the deeper truth,” He said, “is that you are afraid if you stop holding everyone up, nobody will hold you.”

That one she felt in her knees. Patrice turned away because she could not bear His face for a second. He had taken the secret part and said it out loud. Not the surface anger. Not the schedule. Not the money. The fear under all of it. She had spent years becoming useful because useful people got a place in the room. Useful people did not get left. Useful people could postpone their own collapse. She had never named that fear even in prayer because naming it would mean admitting how much of her life had been built around it. She stood there with her back half turned and tried to steady herself. From the lobby came the softened sound of wheels over tile and a low voice asking about checkout. Life kept moving while something inside her was being uncovered.

At lunch Denise told her to take fifteen minutes before the afternoon wave. Patrice almost said she was too busy, then heard how foolish that would sound after the morning she had just had. She slipped out the side entrance and walked toward the National Civil Rights Museum because she did not want to sit in the break room under bad fluorescent light while people scrolled their phones and complained about tips. On Mulberry the day had fully opened. Cars moved past. A few visitors were making their way toward the museum. The brick, the sidewalk, the weight of memory that seemed to hang in that part of South Main all settled around her in a way that was hard to explain. Some places keep human pain in the air. Not to crush you. Just to remind you how much has been carried in the same streets before you got there. Jesus was already there when Patrice reached the quiet edge of the grounds. He stood with His hands loose at His sides and watched a school group gather near a teacher who was trying to count heads.

Patrice let out a tired breath and sat on a low wall. “You just keep appearing.”

“I have not left.”

She looked across the street for a long moment. “I don’t know what to do with that.”

“You do not have to do anything with it yet.”

The teacher finally got her students together and led them inside. The street quieted again. Patrice rubbed her thumb against the side of her phone. “My mother used to say our family loved hard and forgave slow,” she said. “I thought that was just one of those things people say. Then she died and everybody became exactly who they were under pressure. My father got smaller. My sister got colder. My son got restless. I got mean inside.” She looked at Jesus then, because that last line mattered. “Not outside. I know how to act outside. Inside.”

Jesus nodded. “Inside is where the damage has been collecting.”

“I am angry at people I love,” Patrice said, and the admission came out thin. “Sometimes I hear my father call my name for the fourth time in ten minutes and I have to grip the counter and remind myself not to answer him like he chose this. Sometimes DeShawn calls and I see him at twelve and seventeen and twenty-four all at once and I want to help him and shake him and shut my phone off. Sometimes Alana starts talking and all I hear is a person who got to leave while I stayed. Then I hate myself for thinking any of that because none of it makes me sound like a good person.”

Jesus sat beside her, not so close that it felt intrusive, but close enough that His presence felt shared and not distant. “Pain that is never brought into the light begins to teach you how to live in the dark,” He said. “You have been calling that survival.”

Patrice stared ahead. “What else would you call it.”

He looked toward the museum, toward the weight of history and wounds and names and long unfinished work that city carried in its bones. “A warning,” He said quietly. “Because if you keep giving yourself no room for truth, the love in you will harden into service without tenderness. You will still show up. You will still do what must be done. But your heart will begin to leave the room before your body does.”

The words sat between them. Patrice felt them move through her slowly, finding places she had kept barred shut. Service without tenderness. That was close to the thing she had feared becoming and maybe already had become in moments she did not want to revisit. She had not stopped loving people. She had simply gotten used to loving them like somebody hauling boxes alone up a staircase, head down, jaw tight, counting the trips. She covered her face with one hand and let herself sit there in the middle of a city block with everything exposed in her spirit even if nobody passing by could see it. “I don’t know how to come back from that,” she said through her fingers.

“You begin by telling the truth without using it as a weapon,” Jesus said.

Before she could answer, her phone buzzed again. She looked down and saw Alana’s name. Patrice almost rejected it on instinct, but Jesus said, “Take it.” So she did. Her sister did not begin angry this time. She sounded scared, which was worse. Their father had left the burner on after trying to heat soup. A neighbor had smelled it through the open window and come over before anything happened. Alana had stopped by to drop off groceries and found him standing in the kitchen confused and embarrassed. “This can’t keep happening,” Alana said, and now there was no edge in her voice at all. Just fear. “We have to talk today. I’m at Crosstown till six. Please don’t blow this off, Pat.”

Patrice closed her eyes. For a second she was not sitting in the sunlight near the museum. She was back in that apartment with the narrow kitchen and the old man who had once fixed everybody’s car on the block and now sometimes forgot whether he had eaten. “I get off at four,” she said.

“Come after.”

Patrice hesitated, because agreeing meant facing something she had kept pushing away. Alana heard the hesitation and went quiet. “I’m not trying to fight you,” she said more softly. “I’m just not pretending anymore that this is okay.”

After the call ended, Patrice held the phone in her lap and looked down at it like it had become heavier. “I knew we were getting close,” she said. “I kept telling myself I just needed to make it through one more month. One more schedule. One more stretch. Like somehow if I kept moving fast enough, reality couldn’t catch me.”

Jesus stood and offered her His hand. When she took it, He drew her up gently. “Reality is not your enemy,” He said. “But refusing it will wound everyone around you.”

She nodded once, because there was nothing to argue with there. The lunch break had almost disappeared. She had to go back inside, back to the desk, back to the smile people were paying for even when they never thought of it that way. Yet something had shifted. Not fixed. Not solved. Shifted. The numbness had cracked enough to let pain breathe, and painful as that was, it was better than the dead flat place she had been living from. As they walked back toward Central Station, the tracks nearby caught the light and a train horn sounded far off, low and long. Memphis felt old in that moment and alive, burdened and still moving, like the people in it. Patrice thought about Crosstown waiting later in the day, and about the conversation she did not want, and about the son who still had not said what he needed, and about the father sitting in a kitchen that no longer made sense to him. Fear rose again, but it did not rise alone. Jesus was beside her.

Back in the lobby, the afternoon had begun to gather itself. A family was checking in early. Lionel was guiding a cart toward the elevator. Denise was at the far end of the desk dealing with a reservation issue that had already sharpened her tone. Patrice slipped behind the counter and logged back in, but now the day felt less like a wall and more like a road she was going to have to walk without pretending it was easy. She checked her phone one more time before tucking it away. DeShawn had texted again. Not asking for money this time. Just seven words. Mom, please answer. I need my mother. Patrice stared at the screen until it dimmed in her hand. All morning she had been speaking about duty and burden and exhaustion. But those words did not prepare her for that line. Not when it came from the son who had worn out so much of her patience. Not when it landed in the same heart that was already trying to accept her father’s decline. Not when Jesus had just named the difference between endurance and tenderness. She looked up and found Him watching her from across the lobby. He did not speak. He did not need to. The next part of the day was coming, and it was going to ask more truth from her than the morning had.

She slipped the phone back into her pocket, but the words stayed with her through the next hour as if they had been spoken out loud in the center of the lobby for everyone to hear. Mom, please answer. I need my mother. Patrice handled arrivals and questions and room changes with the same trained calm she always used, but something inside her had gone tender in a place that had been hard for a long time. She kept seeing DeShawn at seven with a scraped knee and a plastic dinosaur in his hand. She kept seeing him at fifteen pretending not to care that his father had stopped coming around. She kept seeing him at twenty-four with that guarded mouth and restless eyes, trying to pass for a man who had it handled when he did not. There were reasons she had grown tired. Real reasons. He had asked for money too many times. He had made promises he did not keep. He had learned how to call when a crisis was fresh and disappear once the pressure eased. Still, that text had cut through the anger and touched something deeper. She knew the difference between somebody wanting rescue and somebody finally admitting they were scared. This felt like fear.

At one point Denise asked Patrice to step into the office to go over a guest complaint that turned out to be nothing more than a man upset that a room on the second floor was not as quiet as he had imagined. Patrice stood there listening while Denise spoke in that sharp managerial tone that always made every problem sound like a personal moral failure. On any other day Patrice might have gone numb and let it wash over her. This time she found herself half listening and half wondering whether her father had remembered to eat the oatmeal. When Denise finally paused, Patrice realized Jesus was standing just beyond the doorway in the hall, not intruding and not impatient. His presence did something strange to the room. It did not make Denise softer, but it kept Patrice from shrinking. She answered the complaint clearly, offered a simple solution, and when Denise started winding herself up again, Patrice said with a steadiness that surprised her, “I hear you. I’ll handle it.” Denise stared at her for a second, almost offended by the calm, then nodded and let her go. Patrice stepped back into the hall and let out a breath she had been holding in her back teeth. Jesus looked at her and gave the smallest hint of a smile.

“You did not let another person’s tension become your identity,” He said.

Patrice shook her head. “That sounds bigger than what happened.”

“It is exactly what happened.”

She glanced toward the desk, then back at Him. “I still have no idea why You are here.”

He answered the question she had asked with her face more than the one she had spoken. “Because your life is not ending in the place you thought it was ending.”

That stayed with her too. It stayed with her when she finally took a short break and walked outside with her phone in one hand and the afternoon sun pressing down on the pavement. She stood near the side entrance where the noise of the street softened just enough for her to hear herself think. Then she called DeShawn. He answered on the second ring so fast it startled her.

“Ma.”

“I’m on break. Talk.”

There was traffic behind him, and voices, and the sharp little sound of embarrassment in every breath he took before speaking. “I’m sorry,” he said first.

Patrice closed her eyes. “What happened.”

He told her he had lost his job two weeks earlier at a warehouse near the airport and had been trying to figure it out before she found out. He had been driving deliveries for cash when he could get them, doing whatever people asked as long as it paid something the same day. Then the man he had been renting a room from told him he had until tonight to come up with what he owed or clear out. He had not wanted to call because he knew what she would think. He knew how it sounded. He said he had gone by her apartment earlier but did not want to scare his grandfather by knocking when no one was home. Now he was sitting outside the Memphis Central Library on Poplar because he did not know where else to sit that did not cost money and because for some reason being around books felt less desperate than being around people. Patrice listened without interrupting, one hand pressed to her forehead. There was a time when every word of that would have hit her as accusation. Another demand. Another mess rolling downhill toward her. But something in his voice had no hustle in it. He was not building a case. He was worn through.

“Why didn’t you tell me when you lost the job,” she asked.

“Because you already got enough.”

That one hurt in a different way. It was the kind of answer that showed a person had seen your burden and still not known how to come near it except in crisis. Patrice looked down the street and saw Jesus standing a few feet away beside a planter, watching a couple argue quietly over a map on a phone screen as they tried to find their way. He noticed everything. She wished, suddenly and fiercely, that she had noticed more too. “I get off at four,” she said. “Can you hold on till then.”

“I can.”

“Don’t ask me for money right now. I’m not saying no. I’m saying don’t start there.”

There was a long pause. “Okay.”

“I’m meeting your aunt at Crosstown after work. Come there at five-thirty.”

“Why.”

“Because I said so.”

For the first time in the call she heard the old almost-laugh in him, tired and small but real. “All right.”

When she hung up, she realized Jesus had moved closer without her seeing Him do it. “You heard that,” she said.

“I heard a son trying to hide his shame behind silence.”

Patrice leaned against the brick wall and looked at the sky for a second. “I do not have anything left for people to keep falling into.”

“No,” Jesus said. “You have less than you thought, and that is finally forcing the truth into the open.”

She laughed once under her breath. “You have a way of taking the little bit of comfort I’m reaching for and turning it into a harder sentence.”

“Because comfort without truth would leave you where you were.”

She could not even argue with that anymore. She went back inside and finished the day one interaction at a time. A child dropped a toy train near the desk and started crying when he thought it had been lost. Jesus bent, picked it up, and crouched to hand it back to him as if the moment mattered just as much as the big griefs. A man in a suit snapped at Lionel for not moving fast enough, and Jesus put a hand on Lionel’s shoulder after the man left, not with pity but with dignity, like reminding him that another person’s disrespect had not reduced him. Patrice watched these small moments the way thirsty people watch water. It was not just that Jesus handled pain well. It was that He treated small human strain as if it was worth gentleness too. That changed the air around Him. It changed the air around her.

At four-ten she signed out, grabbed her bag, and headed to her car with the kind of tiredness that settles in the bones, but there was something else under it now. Not energy. Not relief. Something steadier. Jesus walked beside her through the parking area and said nothing while she drove north toward Crosstown Concourse. Memphis moved around them in its late afternoon skin, lights changing, people inching through traffic, storefronts holding all the ordinary business of a city that had no idea one woman was driving toward a conversation she had been postponing for months. Patrice passed familiar blocks and familiar neglect and familiar beauty too. A mural on a brick wall. A porch with somebody sitting out front in silence. A man crossing the street with a grocery bag cutting into his fingers. The city looked tired and alive at the same time. It always had.

By the time she parked at Crosstown, the big old building was holding that strange mixture it always carried, part history and part daily movement, families and workers and people getting coffee and people coming out of appointments and people trying to hold their lives together in public without letting too much show. Patrice found Alana near the long central atrium, sitting at a table with two paper cups and a folder resting beside her elbow. Her sister stood when she saw her. For one second they looked at each other not as opponents but as women who had both been carrying too much in different ways. Alana had always been the prettier one in a way people noticed first, but now she looked worn and serious and more like their mother than Patrice had realized. The folder on the table made Patrice immediately tense.

“If that’s paperwork for putting him somewhere, you can stop,” she said before sitting down.

Alana’s mouth tightened. “And there you are.”

Patrice set her bag down harder than she meant to. “I told you I’m not fighting.”

“No,” Alana said. “You told me not to start there. That’s not the same thing.”

Jesus was nearby, standing beside a pillar where He could see them both. He did not interrupt. He waited. Patrice sat. Alana sat. Neither touched the coffee at first. The hum of Crosstown moved around them, children laughing somewhere down below, footsteps on the upper level, the soft sound of dishes from a nearby counter. It was such a public place for a private fracture, but maybe that helped. There was less room for either of them to become dramatic in front of strangers. Alana finally pushed one cup toward Patrice.

“It’s just coffee,” she said. “Not an attack.”

Patrice took it. “Thanks.”

Alana rested both hands on the folder without opening it. “He’s not safe alone.”

“I know.”

“You keep saying that like knowing it counts as doing something about it.”

Patrice almost came back sharp, but Jesus caught her eye from where He stood. Tell the truth without using it as a weapon. She looked down at the lid on her cup. “I keep saying it because every time I let myself think about what comes next, it feels like I’m standing at the edge of something I don’t know how to afford.”

That softened Alana’s face a little. “I know it does.”

“No,” Patrice said, and this time it was not said to wound. “I don’t think you do. I think you know it’s hard. I don’t think you know what it’s like to hear him call for Mama and know I have to be the one who says she’s not here. I don’t think you know what it’s like to leave work and drive home hoping the apartment is still all right. I don’t think you know what it’s like to hear the microwave beep and feel scared instead of normal.”

Alana took that without flinching because maybe she knew she should. Then she looked up and said, “You’re right. I don’t know exactly what your days feel like. But you don’t know mine either.”

Patrice stared at her.

Alana let out a breath that trembled more than her voice did. “When Mama was dying, I started coming around less because every time I walked in that apartment I felt like I was suffocating. I hated myself for it, so I got angry instead because angry feels stronger than guilty. After she died, you became the good daughter and I became the one who kept some distance. That story got easier for both of us than the real one.”

Patrice did not answer. She had rehearsed versions of this hurt so many times that hearing a different sentence felt almost disorienting.

“The real one,” Alana went on, “is that I was scared if I let myself stay in the middle of all that pain, I was going to disappear in it. So I pulled back. Then the longer I stayed back, the harder it got to come close without feeling ashamed. So every time I saw you tired and angry and holding everything, I came in defensive because I already knew I hadn’t done enough.”

There it was. Not excuse. Not full repair. Truth. Patrice looked away for a moment because the honesty of it moved something in her that blame never could. She had spent years being furious at a cleaner version of the story. One sister stayed. One sister drifted. It was easier to live with anger than with the sadder truth that both of them had been afraid in different directions. Alana opened the folder and turned it toward her. “I talked to someone at Church Health downstairs,” she said. “There are caregiver support options. Adult day support too. I’m not saying we make some huge decision tonight. I’m saying we stop pretending you can carry this by yourself without it breaking you and him both.”

Patrice looked at the papers but did not really read them yet. “I don’t want him thinking we’re trying to get rid of him.”

Alana’s eyes filled a little, though she held steady. “He’s not a child, Pat. He knows he’s forgetting things. Maybe not every hour. But enough. He’s probably more scared than either of us.”

That was true too, and Patrice hated it because truth never arrived alone. It brought tenderness with it, and tenderness made everything feel less manageable. She rubbed a hand over her mouth. “I don’t know how to do this.”

“You don’t have to know all of it tonight.”

Jesus stepped closer then, not suddenly enough to startle them, but enough that His nearness felt like part of the conversation. Alana looked at Him with the kind of uncertainty people have when they know they are in the presence of someone they cannot explain but do not want to turn away from. Jesus rested His hand on the back of an empty chair and said, “Love does not become betrayal when it finally tells the truth.”

Neither woman spoke for a moment. The noise of the building seemed to soften around that sentence. Patrice looked at her sister, really looked, and saw not an accuser but another daughter who had lost a mother and was now watching a father slowly leave in pieces. “I’m tired of being mad at you,” Patrice said quietly.

Alana gave the kind of laugh people give when they are about to cry. “I’m tired of helping only from the edges.”

They sat there longer than either had expected. They talked through practical things without pretending practical things were the whole matter. Alana could take their father three nights a week. Patrice admitted she would need that and then hated how much relief came with saying yes. Alana said they would go together to speak with someone at Church Health instead of Patrice carrying that alone too. Patrice confessed she had been afraid that accepting help would make it official, make the decline more real. Alana said it was already real. They let that be real together. It did not heal everything between them, but it stripped something false away, and what remained felt more human than the old polished grievance.

At five-thirty sharp DeShawn came through the atrium doors. Patrice saw him before he saw her, and for one second her heart went soft in a way she had been trying not to let happen. He looked older than twenty-four in the face and younger in the shoulders. He needed a haircut. His shirt was clean but wrinkled. He walked like a man trying not to show he did not know whether he belonged where he was. When he reached the table, he stopped short at the sight of Alana and almost turned around.

“Sit down,” Patrice said.

“I can come back.”

“Sit.”

He sat. Alana gave him a look that was not hostile, just tired and measuring. “Hey, nephew.”

“Hey.”

For a minute nobody spoke. Then Patrice said, “Tell us the truth one time all the way through.”

DeShawn glanced around the atrium as if looking for exits that were not there. Then he did. He told them about losing the job. About not wanting to tell her because every conversation between them had started feeling like disappointment. About trying to patch it with gig work. About owing money to the man he rented from. About how every time he almost called sooner he heard her tired voice in his head and decided tomorrow would be better. Then tomorrow got worse. He did not ask for money even once during the telling. He just sat there with his hands clasped and his pride stripped thin. Patrice listened and realized how often she had become ready to defend herself before a person had even finished revealing themselves. She had not been wrong about the burden. But she had started hearing need as threat.

“What do you need right now,” she asked at last.

DeShawn looked at the table. “I need somebody not to look at me like I’m already the worst thing I’ve done.”

No one moved for a second. Then Jesus pulled out the chair beside him and sat down. DeShawn looked over, really saw Him, and everything defensive in his face loosened and then tightened again because being seen that clearly can feel like mercy and exposure at the same time. Jesus said, “Shame has been talking to you like it is wisdom.”

DeShawn swallowed. “Feels more like facts.”

“It tells facts in a voice that leaves out hope.”

Patrice watched her son’s face shift. He had heard sermons before. He had heard lectures. He had heard warnings. This was different. Jesus was not trying to corner him into performance. He was naming the thing under the thing. “I kept thinking if I could fix it fast, I wouldn’t have to come back looking like this,” DeShawn said.

“Like what,” Jesus asked.

His answer came so low Patrice barely heard it. “Like a burden.”

That word again. It moved through the table like an old family inheritance nobody had meant to pass down but somehow had. Patrice looked at him and suddenly saw all the places she had carried her pain in front of him like a lesson instead of a wound. He had learned from her tiredness as much as from her love. He had learned that need should apologize for itself before it spoke. Her eyes burned. “Baby,” she said, and even at twenty-four he looked up at that word the way boys do when the part of them that never stops being a son has been reached. “You are a lot of things. You are not a burden.”

He blinked hard and looked away. Alana did too.

The next hour did not solve poverty or memory loss or years of strain, but it changed the room where those things would now be faced. Alana said DeShawn could stay with her for a few days if he needed somewhere clean and stable while he figured out the next step, provided stable meant actually working a plan and not hiding in a back bedroom. He nodded before she finished the sentence. Patrice said she would help him sort the rent situation, but not by pretending money without truth was help. He agreed to let them both know everything that was going on. They talked about his grandfather, and for the first time DeShawn admitted he had been avoiding the apartment partly because seeing the old man decline scared him too much. Patrice had almost called that selfishness a dozen times in past months. Now she could see the fear inside it. Jesus said little after that. He did not need to. The hardest thing had already happened. People who had been half hiding from one another were beginning to stand in the open.

When they finally left Crosstown, the evening had softened. The four of them drove to Patrice’s apartment in two cars, Jesus riding with Patrice because by then it no longer felt strange that He simply remained present wherever the truth was being asked for. The apartment complex looked exactly as it always did, cracked curb, tired paint, one porch light out near the stairwell, but Patrice felt different walking up to it. Not lighter. More honest. That mattered more. Inside, her father was sitting in the recliner with the television too loud and a dish towel folded in his lap for no reason he would have been able to explain. He looked up when they entered, and for a second his face brightened with recognition so clean it almost broke them all.

“There my girls are,” he said.

Patrice crossed the room first and kissed his forehead. “Hey Daddy.”

Alana came in right behind her. He looked from one to the other, then to DeShawn, and smiled. “Boy, you getting tall.”

DeShawn laughed softly. “I think I’m done, Pawpaw.”

The old man chuckled at that and then frowned slightly as if some piece of time had slipped under his feet. Patrice went into the kitchen to start something simple because people talk more honestly with food in the room, even when the food is just eggs and toast and what is left in the refrigerator. She heard Alana in the living room lowering the television. She heard DeShawn asking his grandfather if he wanted water. She heard Jesus moving through the apartment with the kind of care that made even the small place feel less cramped. When Patrice opened the fridge, she found the oatmeal untouched and the soup pot still on the stove from earlier. She stood there with the refrigerator light on her face and let the reality of that land all the way. Then instead of swallowing it alone, she called out, “Alana, can you come here a second.”

Her sister came to the kitchen doorway. Patrice pointed at the stove and the untouched bowl. That was all. Alana looked at it, then looked at Patrice, and there was no blame in either face this time. Only grief. Only recognition. They stood there in the narrow kitchen shoulder to shoulder long enough for the moment to become shared instead of solitary. That, more than anything, felt new.

They ate at the small table and on the couch and standing in the kitchen because there were not enough chairs and because families under pressure do not suddenly become elegant when truth arrives. Patrice’s father asked after her mother twice and both times the answer was handled gently. At one point he looked at Jesus and said, with complete seriousness, “I know You from somewhere.” Jesus smiled in a way that made the whole room go still without anybody quite understanding why. “Yes,” He said. “You do.” The old man nodded as though that settled something he had been trying to recall. Later, halfway through a story about a friend nobody else remembered, he stopped and looked around the room with a clearing in his eyes that felt like a window opening. “Y’all don’t have to do this angry,” he said.

No one answered right away because none of them had expected that kind of lucidity to walk in so cleanly. He looked at Patrice first, then at Alana, then at DeShawn. “Family gets tired,” he said. “That ain’t the same as love leaving.” Then the window began to close again. He looked down at his plate and asked who had made the eggs. Patrice had to turn away for a second because tears came too fast. Jesus was watching all of them with that same quiet authority, not controlling the moment, not pressing it, only holding it open while it existed.

After dinner Alana washed the dishes because Patrice let her. DeShawn took out the trash because Patrice asked and he said yes without the old drag in his voice. Patrice sat beside her father while he dozed in the recliner and covered him with the faded blanket her mother had kept folded over the couch. Jesus sat near the window. The apartment was still small. The bills were still real. The future was still uncertain. Nothing about their lives had become easy because one honest evening had happened. Yet the room no longer felt ruled by the old invisible lie that each person had to carry their fear alone and translate it into anger so they would not drown in it. Something gentler had entered, and because Jesus was there she knew it was not weakness.

When it was time for Alana to leave, she hugged Patrice long and without the stiffness they had worn for years. “I’ll come by tomorrow after work,” she said. “We’ll go together. Church Health, all of it.”

Patrice nodded. “Okay.”

DeShawn lingered by the door. “I’ll come too if you want.”

She looked at him. “I do.”

He swallowed and then pulled her into a hug that felt awkward only for the first second before it turned into what it really was, a grown son holding on to his mother like he had finally run out of ways to pretend he did not need one. Patrice closed her eyes and held him back. Not because everything was fixed. Because he was hers and she was still here. When he stepped away, his face looked different. Not perfect. Not suddenly healed. Less hidden.

The night deepened by the time the apartment quieted again. Alana left with a folder under her arm and a new steadiness in her step. DeShawn left with her, carrying a small duffel and promising to be back in the morning. Patrice locked the door behind them and stood for a moment with her hand still on the knob, listening to the silence. Her father was asleep. The television was off. The kitchen was clean enough. She turned and found Jesus standing in the living room near the chair where her father had drifted into sleep.

“Will tomorrow still be hard,” she asked.

“Yes.”

She nodded because she had already known that. “Then what changed.”

“You stopped confusing hidden pain with strength,” He said. “And you let love tell the truth.”

Patrice looked around the apartment that had seen too much strain and too many small private breakdowns. “I thought I needed everything to get lighter before I could breathe.”

“No,” Jesus said. “You needed what was true to stop living in the dark.”

Her eyes filled again, but now the tears felt cleaner somehow, less like collapse and more like release. “Will I do this right from here on.”

“You will do some of it badly,” He said, and there was kindness in that answer too. “But badly done truth can still be healed. Hidden falseness hardens.”

She laughed softly through the wetness in her face. “That sounds like You.”

He smiled. “It does.”

She walked Him to the door though she did not know why, only that it felt right not to let the day end carelessly. On the landing outside the apartment, the night air had cooled. Somewhere down the block somebody was laughing. A dog barked once and stopped. Memphis had settled into its evening self, worn and breathing and still full of people trying to carry what life had placed in their hands. Patrice stood there for a second not wanting to say goodbye because goodbye suggested absence and nothing about the day had felt like a passing visit. Jesus looked at her the way a person looks when they have been with you through your hardest hour and are not measuring you by how well you handled it.

“Rest where you can,” He said. “And when you cannot rest, do not lie about your need.”

Patrice nodded. “I’ll try.”

“Try honestly,” He said.

Then He turned and walked down the stairs. Patrice watched until the shadows and the dim yellow light from the lot below half swallowed His figure. She stayed there long enough to feel the weight of the day settling differently in her body. Not gone. Rearranged. When she finally went back inside, she checked on her father one more time, covered his feet where the blanket had slipped, and stood in the kitchen with the lights low. For the first time in longer than she could remember, she did not feel like the only person standing between her family and collapse. That did not make her life simple. It made it human again.

Much later, after the city had thinned into headlights and distant sound, Jesus returned to Tom Lee Park. The river moved in the dark with the same old strength it had carried that morning. The skyline held its lights across the water. Wind moved softly over the grass. Jesus knelt again in quiet prayer, calm and grounded and fully present, as if every tear and every fear and every small turning of a human heart had been held before the Father all along. He remained there in the stillness with Memphis around Him, a city full of hurt and beauty and unfinished stories, and the night rested gently over the river while He prayed.

Your friend, Douglas Vandergraph

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In February 2026, Mustafa Suleyman, the chief executive of Microsoft AI, told the Financial Times that artificial intelligence would achieve “human-level performance on most, if not all, professional tasks” within 12 to 18 months. Most tasks that involve sitting down at a computer, he said, would be fully automated. Accounting. Legal work. Marketing. Project management. All of it. The prediction was remarkable not because it was outlandish but because Suleyman runs one of the largest AI operations on the planet and was speaking with the calm certainty of someone describing next quarter's product roadmap rather than a civilisational rupture.

A few months earlier, Salesforce chief executive Marc Benioff had already demonstrated what that roadmap looks like in practice. On The Logan Bartlett Show in September 2025, Benioff revealed that AI agents now handle roughly half of all customer service interactions at Salesforce. The company's support workforce had been cut from 9,000 to approximately 5,000 employees since the beginning of that year. Not through attrition. Through replacement. The automation shift, he noted, had lowered support costs by 17 per cent. “I need less heads,” Benioff said, with the bluntness of a chief executive who had already made the calculation and moved on.

These are not hypotheticals from a futurist's slide deck. They are operational realities at two of the world's largest technology companies. And they hint at something that the mainstream conversation about artificial intelligence and employment has been reluctant to confront: the labour crisis that is now forming will not resemble the one we spent a decade preparing for. It will be faster, broader, and stranger. The familiar narrative of blue-collar workers displaced by robots, retrained through government programmes, and reabsorbed into a new knowledge economy is not merely optimistic. It may be entirely wrong.

When the Tool Becomes the Worker

For the better part of a decade, the dominant metaphor for artificial intelligence in the workplace was “copilot.” AI would augment human work. It would handle the tedious parts. It would make professionals faster, sharper, more productive. The human remained in the loop, in the driver's seat, in control. This framing was convenient for technology companies selling enterprise subscriptions and for governments drafting policy papers. It was also, for a time, reasonably accurate.

That time is ending.

The shift now underway is from AI as a tool to AI as an agent. Where a copilot assists with a task, an agent completes a workflow. The distinction is not semantic. It is structural. A copilot requires a human to initiate each step, review each output, and decide what comes next. An agent receives a goal and executes the entire chain of actions required to achieve it, making intermediate decisions autonomously, invoking tools, and adapting its approach based on the results it encounters along the way.

Consider what this looks like in practice. An agentic AI system does not summarise a legal document and wait for a lawyer to act on it. It reads the document, identifies the relevant clauses, cross-references them against a regulatory database, drafts a compliance memo, and routes it to the appropriate department. End to end. No human in the loop until the output arrives. KPMG's Q2 2025 survey found that 33 per cent of organisations had already deployed AI agents, a threefold increase from 11 per cent in the prior survey period. The velocity of adoption is itself part of the story.

This distinction matters enormously. Previous waves of automation targeted discrete, repetitive tasks: welding car chassis, scanning barcodes, sorting parcels. The displacement was real but contained. It affected specific roles in specific industries and could, at least in theory, be addressed through retraining. Agentic AI is different because it targets entire occupational workflows, and it does so across the information economy simultaneously. A recent paper published on arXiv in April 2026, analysing occupational exposure across five major US technology regions, found that 93.2 per cent of 236 analysed occupations in information-intensive sectors crossed the moderate-risk threshold for agentic AI displacement by 2030. Credit analysts, sustainability specialists, and even judges appeared at the high end of the exposure spectrum.

The market reflects this shift. The AI agent market is projected to grow from 7.84 billion dollars in 2025 to 52.62 billion dollars by 2030, a compound annual growth rate of 46.3 per cent. Sixty-two per cent of organisations surveyed by McKinsey in 2025 said they were at least experimenting with AI agents. Half of AI high performers intended to use AI to transform their businesses entirely, redesigning workflows from the ground up rather than bolting AI onto existing processes. Among organisations with extensive agentic AI adoption, 45 per cent expected reductions in middle management layers. The infrastructure for a workerless middle is being built in real time, and the companies building it are not shy about saying so.

The Reskilling Illusion

Whenever automation threatens jobs, the response from governments and industry bodies follows a predictable script. Workers will be reskilled. New jobs will emerge. The economy will adapt. This narrative has been the centrepiece of labour policy for decades, and it has a comforting internal logic: since every previous technological revolution eventually created more jobs than it destroyed, this one will too.

The problem is that the logic depends on a transition period that may no longer exist.

The World Economic Forum's Future of Jobs Report 2025 projected that global trends in technology, economy, demographics, and green transition would generate 170 million new jobs by 2030 while displacing 92 million others, yielding a net increase of 78 million positions. On paper, the maths works. But the report also noted that 41 per cent of employers intended to reduce their workforce due to AI by 2030, and that the 22 per cent churn rate in the global workforce meant roles were being eliminated and recreated faster than workers could realistically transition. These displaced jobs and the new ones are not direct exchanges occurring in the same locations with the same individuals. A financial analyst made redundant in Manchester does not become a machine learning engineer in San Francisco. The geography, the skills, the timelines, and the economics of transition all point in different directions.

The reskilling infrastructure that is supposed to bridge this gap is, by most honest assessments, not fit for purpose. A 2026 survey found that 51 per cent of organisations reported widening skills gaps, with AI adoption outpacing reskilling efforts. Sixty-seven per cent of US workers said their organisation had not been proactive in training employees to work alongside AI. Only 17 per cent reported their company was doing anything meaningful to upskill workers in AI-impacted roles. The demand for AI fluency in job postings, meanwhile, has grown sevenfold in two years, from roughly 1 million workers in occupations requiring it in 2023 to about 7 million in 2025. The skills the market demands are racing ahead of the skills the workforce possesses, and the gap is widening, not narrowing.

The historical precedent is not encouraging either. The offshoring wave of the 1990s and 2000s generated similar promises about retraining displaced manufacturing workers. Those programmes were, by most economic assessments, deeply inadequate. Workers who lost factory jobs in the American Midwest or the industrial towns of northern England did not seamlessly transition into knowledge work. Many never recovered their previous earnings. The communities they lived in hollowed out. Decades later, the social and political consequences of that failure are still unfolding.

Now imagine that dynamic, but applied to the knowledge workers themselves.

Daron Acemoglu, the Nobel Prize-winning economist at MIT, has spent years developing a task-based framework for understanding automation's impact on labour markets. His central insight is that automation raises average productivity but does not necessarily increase, and may in fact reduce, worker marginal productivity. Over the past four decades, he argues, automation has multiplied corporate profits without producing shared prosperity. The crucial question about AI, in Acemoglu's framing, is whether it will take the form of “machine usefulness,” helping workers become more productive, or whether it will be aimed at mimicking general intelligence to replace human labour entirely. His concern is that the industry has overwhelmingly pursued the latter path: not providing new information to a biotechnologist but replacing a customer service worker with automated call-centre technology. The distinction determines whether AI becomes a force for broad-based prosperity or for further concentration of economic power.

The Vanishing First Rung

Perhaps the most underappreciated dimension of the emerging labour crisis is its impact on entry-level employment. The traditional career ladder in knowledge work has always begun with grunt work: junior lawyers reviewing documents, junior analysts building financial models, junior developers writing boilerplate code. These tasks were not merely busywork. They were the mechanism through which professionals developed expertise, judgement, and institutional knowledge. They were the learning curve itself.

Agentic AI is automating that learning curve.

A Stanford study published in 2025 found that hiring for entry-level, AI-impacted positions, such as junior accounting roles, fell by 16 per cent over approximately two years. In the United Kingdom, tech graduate roles fell by 46 per cent in 2024, with projections for a further 53 per cent decline by 2026. In the United States, entry-level postings in software development and data analysis have plummeted, with some estimates indicating a 67 per cent decrease in junior tech postings. The share of tech job postings requiring at least five years of experience jumped from 37 per cent to 42 per cent between mid-2022 and mid-2025, while the share open to candidates with two to four years of experience dropped from 46 per cent to 40 per cent over the same period.

The implications run deeper than unemployment statistics. If the entry-level rung of the career ladder is removed, the entire structure above it becomes unstable. Senior professionals retire. Mid-career workers advance. But the pipeline of replacements narrows to a trickle. Organisations that automate away their junior roles may find, within five to ten years, that they have a workforce with no depth: plenty of experienced employees nearing retirement, a handful of AI systems handling routine work, and virtually no one in between with the institutional knowledge and professional judgement that can only develop through years of hands-on practice.

This is not a speculative scenario. It is the logical consequence of decisions being made right now, and the people most affected can see it coming. A survey of the class of 2026 found that 89 per cent of graduates believed AI could replace entry-level roles, compared with 64 per cent just one year earlier. This is not irrational anxiety. It is a reasonable reading of the data. Employers project a marginal 1.6 per cent increase in hiring for the class of 2026 compared with the class of 2025, which in real terms signals a functional contraction in opportunity when adjusted for the increasing number of graduates entering the labour market.

The question is what happens to an entire generation of workers who cannot find their way onto the first rung. And what happens to the professions that depend on that generation eventually climbing to the top.

The White-Collar Reckoning

The conversation about AI and employment has been distorted by a persistent assumption: that white-collar, knowledge-intensive work is somehow safe. That assumption was always fragile. It is now collapsing.

The occupations most immediately vulnerable to agentic AI are not the ones most people expect. They are not cashiers and truck drivers, the perennial examples in automation discourse. They are financial analysts, compliance officers, legal researchers, administrative coordinators, marketing strategists, and mid-level project managers. These are the roles that consist primarily of information processing, pattern recognition, and structured decision-making, precisely the tasks that large language models and agentic systems now perform with increasing competence.

Anthropic's Claude 3.7 Sonnet, released in early 2025, reliably completes tasks that would take a human approximately one hour. Current frontier models from OpenAI and Google achieve near-perfect success rates on tasks requiring less than four minutes of human effort, though success rates drop below 10 per cent for tasks exceeding four hours. The capability curve is steep and climbing. What took an hour last year takes minutes today. What takes four hours today will take minutes within a year or two, if the trajectory holds.

A 2025 Thomson Reuters report found that lawyers, accountants, and auditors were experimenting with AI for targeted tasks like document review and routine analysis, with productivity improvements that were real but marginal. The gap between marginal improvement and wholesale replacement is precisely where agentic AI operates. When the system can handle not just the document review but the entire compliance workflow, from intake to analysis to output, the calculus changes fundamentally.

AI adoption in accounting firms leapt from 9 per cent in 2024 to 41 per cent in 2025. Routine reconciliations, expense categorisation, audit preparation, and compliance documentation are increasingly handled by AI-powered platforms. Senior accountants remain essential for oversight and regulatory interpretation, but the pyramid of junior and mid-level staff that supports them is being compressed. Employment consultancy Challenger, Gray and Christmas reported that approximately 55,000 job cuts in 2025 were explicitly AI-related, with modelling-adjusted estimates placing actual AI-displaced or foregone positions at 200,000 to 300,000 across the US economy. Across the technology sector alone, more than 64,000 jobs were eliminated in 2025, with Microsoft announcing cuts of approximately 15,000 positions despite strong earnings.

The Klarna case offers a cautionary study in both directions. The Swedish fintech company replaced the work of 700 customer service employees with AI agents, and chief executive Sebastian Siemiatkowski initially celebrated the efficiency gains. But by early 2025, internal reviews and customer feedback revealed that the AI systems lacked the capacity for empathetic engagement and nuanced problem-solving that customer support requires. Service quality deteriorated. Customer complaints mounted. Klarna began rehiring human staff. The lesson was not that AI cannot do the work. It was that the work is more complex than it appears from the outside, and that automating it poorly carries its own costs. It was also, crucially, that the workers who were let go do not simply wait in suspended animation until a company decides it needs them again. They move on, retrain, relocate, or fall out of the workforce entirely. The damage of premature automation is not easily reversed.

The Global Asymmetry

The labour impact of agentic AI will not be distributed evenly across the world. For countries that built their economic development strategies around the offshoring of information services, the threat is existential.

India employs between 7.5 and 8 million people in its technology services sector and another 2 to 2.5 million in customer service and business process outsourcing. In February 2026, venture capitalist Vinod Khosla warned that India's IT services and BPO sectors could “almost completely disappear” within five years as AI systems outperform human expertise. The prediction may be hyperbolic, but the underlying dynamic is real. An estimated 1.65 million Indians working in voice support, data processing, and administrative BPO roles face direct displacement from AI agents, some of which can already handle up to 95 per cent of customer queries without human involvement.

In a worst-case scenario analysed by industry researchers, the headcount in India's tech services sector could decline from its current levels to approximately 6 million by 2031, while the customer service sector could shrink from 2 to 2.5 million to 1.8 million. For a country where technology outsourcing has been a primary engine of middle-class formation, these are not incremental adjustments. They are structural fractures in the economic model that lifted hundreds of millions out of poverty.

The Philippines, another major outsourcing hub, faces similar pressures. So do parts of Eastern Europe, North Africa, and Latin America, where call centres and back-office operations have provided employment pathways for millions. The International Labour Organisation estimated in 2025 that around a quarter of jobs worldwide, more than 600 million roles, are potentially exposed to the effects of generative AI. In Latin America specifically, between 26 and 38 per cent of jobs, roughly 88 million roles, could be affected.

The irony is sharp. For decades, the promise of globalisation was that developing countries could leapfrog industrialisation by building service economies. Now the very service tasks that powered that model are the ones most susceptible to automation. The global South was told to skip the factory and go straight to the call centre. It turns out the call centre was a waypoint, not a destination. And the next waypoint is not yet visible.

Policy in Slow Motion

The regulatory response to agentic AI's labour implications has been, with a few exceptions, strikingly inadequate. Most policy frameworks treat AI governance as a safety and ethics question, not a labour question. The European Union's AI Act, which began entering into force in stages from 2024, establishes important guardrails around high-risk AI systems, but it does not address the core challenge of structural job displacement. Regulating how AI systems are developed and deployed is fundamentally different from managing how societies absorb the economic dislocation those systems create.

Some European policy experts have recognised this gap. The European Policy Centre has called for a “European AI Social Compact,” tied to the European Social Fund, that would align technological progress with labour protections and targeted upskilling across all 27 member states. The German Institute for Employment Research projected that 1.6 million jobs could be reshaped by or lost to AI in Germany alone over the next fifteen years. More broadly, researchers estimate that 50.2 million Europeans, or 32 per cent of the working population, face the risk of displacement in their current roles.

In the United States, policy responses have been fragmented and modest. The Guaranteed Income Pilot Programme Act of 2025, introduced by Representative Bonnie Watson Coleman, authorised 495 million dollars annually for five years to establish nationwide guaranteed income pilots. Representative Rashida Tlaib has proposed the BOOST Act, a 250-dollar monthly refundable tax credit. OpenAI chief executive Sam Altman has promoted the concept of an “American Equity Fund,” where large AI companies and landholders would contribute approximately 2.5 per cent of their value annually to a fund distributed to all citizens. California's Assembly Bill 661 mandates a feasibility study for a permanent statewide guaranteed income programme, explicitly acknowledging the threat automation poses to the state's tech-centric economy.

These are interesting experiments. They are not remotely proportional to the scale of the problem. A 250-dollar monthly payment does not replace a 60,000-dollar salary. A pilot programme does not constitute a safety net. And a feasibility study is, by definition, an acknowledgement that the actual policy does not yet exist.

The fundamental policy challenge is temporal. AI capabilities are advancing on a timeline measured in months. Labour markets adjust over years. Regulatory frameworks evolve over decades. The gap between the speed of technological disruption and the speed of institutional response is not closing. It is widening. And every month it widens further, the eventual adjustment becomes more painful.

What the Crisis Actually Looks Like

If the familiar automation narrative is wrong, what does the actual labour crisis look like?

It does not look like mass unemployment in the traditional sense. It looks like the gradual erosion of the occupational middle. The senior partners at law firms and accounting practices will be fine. The AI systems handling routine work will be fine. Everyone in between faces compression: fewer positions, lower wages, reduced autonomy, and a diminishing path from junior roles to senior ones.

It looks like a generation of graduates locked out of professions they trained for, holding degrees that assumed a labour market structure which no longer exists. It looks like the countries that built their development models around information services discovering that the rungs they climbed have been pulled up behind them.

It looks like corporate profits rising while median wages stagnate or decline, a pattern Acemoglu has documented across four decades of automation and one that agentic AI appears poised to accelerate. It looks like the political consequences of that divergence: the anger, the populism, the search for scapegoats that has already reshaped electoral politics across the Western world.

It looks, in other words, nothing like the orderly transition that government white papers and corporate social responsibility reports have been promising. And it looks precisely like the kind of crisis that societies tend not to prepare for, because preparing would require admitting that the current trajectory is unsustainable.

McKinsey's own research underscores the scale. Their study “Agents, Robots, and Us” found that currently demonstrated technologies could automate activities accounting for approximately 57 per cent of US work hours. Agents, defined as software systems that automate non-physical work, could perform tasks occupying 44 per cent of US work hours. Roles with the highest potential for automation make up approximately 40 per cent of total jobs, concentrated in legal and administrative services and in physically demanding roles such as drivers and machine operators.

The question is not whether work will change. It is whether the institutions meant to manage that change are capable of doing so at the required speed. The evidence, so far, suggests they are not.

Beyond the Productivity Promise

There is a deeper problem buried in the optimistic projections about AI and productivity, and it concerns what happens when the gains accrue almost entirely to capital rather than labour. Every previous technological revolution, from the steam engine to the personal computer, eventually produced broadly shared prosperity, but only after prolonged periods of dislocation, political conflict, and institutional reform. The factory system generated enormous wealth in 19th-century Britain, but it took decades of labour organising, legislative reform, and social upheaval before that wealth was distributed in a way that produced a functioning middle class.

The implicit assumption in today's AI discourse is that the same pattern will repeat, that displacement will be followed by adjustment, that new jobs will emerge, that the economy will find a new equilibrium. Perhaps. But the timescales that previous transitions required are worth noting. The Industrial Revolution's social adjustments took the better part of a century. The post-war economic settlement that created the modern welfare state was forged through two world wars and a global depression. The information technology revolution of the late 20th century produced three decades of wage stagnation for median workers before any broad-based gains materialised, and even those gains were unevenly distributed.

The agentic AI transition is occurring in a world with weaker unions, more fragile social safety nets, and governments already stretched thin by pandemic debt, climate adaptation costs, and geopolitical instability. The institutional capacity to manage a labour market shock of this magnitude is lower than at any point since the early Industrial Revolution.

A PricewaterhouseCoopers report found that 55 per cent of chief executives saw no measurable benefits from AI deployment, while a separate MIT study showed 95 per cent of enterprise uses of generative AI had no measurable impact on profit and loss. These findings might seem reassuring, but they cut both ways. If AI is not yet delivering transformative productivity gains for most organisations, then the job displacement that is already occurring is happening without the compensating economic growth that is supposed to fund new employment. The costs are arriving before the benefits. Workers are being replaced not because AI is producing extraordinary value but because it is producing adequate value at lower cost. That is a different economic story, and it has a different ending.

What Preparation Would Actually Require

Genuine preparation for the agentic AI transition would require a level of policy ambition that no major government has yet demonstrated. It would mean fundamentally rethinking education systems to emphasise adaptability and judgement over domain-specific knowledge that can be automated. It would mean building social insurance systems capable of supporting workers through multiple career transitions, not just one. It would mean confronting the distribution question directly: if AI-driven productivity gains flow primarily to the owners of AI systems, then some mechanism for redistribution is not a progressive wish but a structural necessity.

It would also mean being honest about what reskilling can and cannot do. Retraining a 45-year-old financial analyst to become an AI systems architect is not a realistic proposition for most people. The skills gap is not a gap that can be closed with a six-month certificate programme. And the jobs that are being created by the AI economy, the prompt engineers and machine learning specialists and AI safety researchers, represent a tiny fraction of the employment that is being automated away.

The Carnegie Endowment for International Peace argued in February 2026 that Europe's response to AI labour disruption must extend beyond regulating these systems into fiscal planning and institutional redesign. A credible response, their analysts wrote, rests on three pillars: establishing social protections for displaced workers, providing training infrastructure scaled for continuous transition, and building public trust. That framework is correct. Whether any government will implement it before the crisis arrives is another question entirely.

The pattern of the past decade suggests that policy will follow disaster rather than prevent it. We will get serious about the labour implications of agentic AI roughly 18 months after they become undeniable, which is to say, roughly 18 months too late.

The conversation about AI and jobs has been conducted in the language of the last disruption: automation of routine physical tasks, reskilling programmes, net job creation. That conversation is obsolete. What is coming is the automation of cognitive workflows at scale, the compression of occupational hierarchies, the elimination of the entry-level pipeline, and the concentration of economic gains in an ever-narrower segment of the labour market. It is not the crisis we were told to prepare for. And we are, by almost every meaningful measure, sleepwalking into it.


References and Sources

  1. Fortune, “Microsoft AI chief gives it 18 months for all white-collar work to be automated by AI,” February 2026.
  2. Fortune, “Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff says his company has cut 4,000 customer service jobs as AI steps in: 'I need less heads,'” September 2025.
  3. arXiv, “Agentic AI and Occupational Displacement: A Multi-Regional Task Exposure Analysis of Emerging Labor Market Disruption,” April 2026.
  4. McKinsey and QuantumBlack, “The State of AI in 2025: Agents, Innovation, and Transformation,” 2025.
  5. McKinsey, “Insights on Today's Labor Market: Uncertainty, Agentic AI, and More,” 2025.
  6. World Economic Forum, “Future of Jobs Report 2025,” January 2025.
  7. Fast Company, “Reskilling Won't Save Us from AI. Here's What We Need to Do Instead,” 2025.
  8. Daron Acemoglu and Pascual Restrepo, “Automation and New Tasks: How Technology Displaces and Reinstates Labor,” Journal of Economic Perspectives, Vol. 33, No. 2, 2019.
  9. Daron Acemoglu, “The Simple Macroeconomics of AI,” MIT Economics Working Paper, 2024.
  10. IMF Finance and Development, “Rebalancing AI,” Daron Acemoglu and Simon Johnson, December 2023.
  11. Stanford University, study on AI impact on entry-level hiring, 2025. Reported via IEEE Spectrum, “AI Shifts Expectations for Entry Level Jobs,” 2025.
  12. IntuitionLabs, “AI's Impact on Graduate Jobs: A 2025 Data Analysis,” 2025.
  13. CNBC, “AI is not just ending entry-level jobs. It's the end of the career ladder as we know it,” September 2025.
  14. Thomson Reuters, report on AI adoption in legal and accounting services, 2025.
  15. Challenger, Gray and Christmas, AI-related job cut data, 2025.
  16. CNBC, “Klarna CEO says AI helped company shrink workforce by 40%,” May 2025.
  17. MLQ AI, “Klarna CEO admits AI job cuts went too far,” 2026.
  18. BusinessToday, “IT, BPO services will disappear in the next 5 yrs: Vinod Khosla,” February 2026.
  19. International Labour Organisation, generative AI exposure estimates, 2025.
  20. Ghost Research, “AI Impact on BPO: Transforming India's Workforce,” 2025.
  21. European Policy Centre, “AI's Impact on Europe's Job Market: A Call for a Social Compact,” 2025.
  22. Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, “How Europe Can Survive the AI Labor Transition,” February 2026.
  23. German Institute for Employment Research, AI job displacement projections for Germany, 2025.
  24. Congress.gov, Guaranteed Income Pilot Program Act of 2025 (H.R. 5830), introduced by Rep. Bonnie Watson Coleman, 2025.
  25. PricewaterhouseCoopers, report on CEO AI deployment outcomes, 2025.
  26. Deloitte, “The Agentic Reality Check: Preparing for a Silicon-Based Workforce,” Tech Trends 2026.
  27. PwC, “No More Pyramids: Rethinking Your Workforce for the Agentic AI Era,” 2025.
  28. HFS Research, “Prepare for Agentic AI to Shatter Corporate Workforces and Global Economies,” 2025.
  29. Equal Times, “Agentic AI and the Future of Work: Navigating Technological Promise and the Risk of Increased Automation,” 2025.
  30. AI2 Incubator, “Insights 15: The State of AI Agents in 2025: Balancing Optimism with Reality,” 2025.
  31. The Interview Guys, “89% of 2026 Grads Think AI Will Take Their Job Before They Even Get One,” 2026.

Tim Green

Tim Green UK-based Systems Theorist & Independent Technology Writer

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

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

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

 
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