Want to join in? Respond to our weekly writing prompts, open to everyone.
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from
Roscoe's Quick Notes

When I'm not doing chores today (yard work, laundry, etc.) I'll be relaxing under the a/c watching baseball games courtesy of the MLB Star Spangled Sunday project.
And the adventure continues.
from
CerebralMix Archive
Five episodes of The CerebralMix Podcast from June 2013 have been added to the Archive:
During the process of adding the notes for these episodes to the archive, I was unable to locate any notes for the June 30th episode.
I've been listening to the show, but given that it's been thirteen years since I heard it, I cannot recall the titles or artists for any of these tracks. If anyone listens to this episode and can identify the tracks, please reach out to me on GotoSocial (linked below). Any help is appreciated.
Categories: #podcast Tags: #music, #ambient, #electronic, #pop, #rock License: Copyright Unattributed. Licensed under Creative Commons BY-NC-SA 4.0.
from
💚
Our Father Who art in Heaven Hallowed be Thy name Thy Kingdom come Thy will be done on Earth as it is in Heaven Give us this day our daily Bread And forgive us our trespasses As we forgive those who trespass against us And lead us not into temptation But deliver us from evil
Amen
Jesus is Lord! Come Lord Jesus!
Come Lord Jesus! Christ is Lord!
from
Ennui Vagaries
Casio Lineage LCW-M100TSE, Photo by Unattributed, License: Creative Commons BY-NC-SA 4.0
The Casio Lineage watch line is in my top five daily wear watches. They represented one of the best values in watches imaginable at the price I paid: $180 USD. Today, unfortunately, due to changes in our import policies, they sell for around $250-$300 USD. That's still a reasonable price in my opinion given all the features this watch packs: titanium case and bracelet, solar-powered, dual time zones, up to five alarms, stopwatch, count-down timer, automatic DST/ST detection, and MultiBand 6. It's a lot of watch for the money, rivaled only by some of Casio's digital models.
One of the most amazing things about this watch is MultiBand 6, which automatically syncs the time to the radio broadcast Atomic Clock signals every day. But, even without the automatic synchronization it's accuracy is around ±15 seconds per month, that's under ±1 second per day. MultiBand 6 synchronization is set up by setting your home location in the watch. Once you've set up your home location, the watch will synchronize with the Atomic clock daily. This basically is the king of “grab-n-go” daily wear watches.
But, that doesn't mean it's perfect. The clasp is pressed steel. And the clasp only has two levels of adjustment, meaning that you'll likely have to remove links to resize the bracelet for your wrist. (Even with my 8.5 inch (ca. 22 cm) wrists I had to remove links.) Lume isn't spectacular, while it works, don't rely on it lasting more than a few minutes. The backlight, while bright, doesn't perform all that well. And water resistance is only 5 BAR (50 meters). The biggest problem, however, is availability. A quick scan of eBay shows only one of these watches available in North America, with a price tag of $290.
And there is one other thing: this may be a bit too fancy for some people to wear on a daily basis. Well, that's where the Lineage's sportier twin comes into the picture:
Casio Wave Ceptor WVA-M640B, Photo by Unattributed, License: Creative Commons BY-NC-SA 4.0
While it's not apparent just from looking at it, the Wave Ceptor uses the exact same module as the Lineage watch. This means all the features, such as solar-powered, dual time zones, up to five alarms, stopwatch, count-down timer, automatic DST/ST detection, and MultiBand 6 are the same as the Lineage. Where the differences come into play is on the exterior.
Instead of a titanium case and bracelet, the Wave Ceptor has a resin band. The case / bezel is stainless steel, and the crystal is a curved resin. The markers and hands are wider for easier visibility and to accommodate more lume. (Personally, I really like the markers on this watch better than the Lineage version.) They are also gold, which contrasts nicer with the black dial. The LCD on this version is in a negative configuration to make it blend with the rest of the watch face. This watch also features 10 BAR water resistance, making it more appropriate for an active lifestyle.
But, this watch hides a bit of a secret that makes it more interesting. Instead of a traditional resin strap, this one is integrated into the design of the case:
Lineage vs. Wave Ceptor, Photo by Unattributed, License: Creative Commons BY-NC-SA 4.0
The way the band is integrated into the case design gives it one additional property: shock absorption. Similar to the way G-Shock watch bands are curved to act like a spring, so is the Wave Ceptor. While the documentation doesn't mention how much shock protection is offered, it's clear that this watch was meant to fall somewhere between the Pro Trek and G-Shock lines of watches. Alas, this means changing to an alternative watch band is probably a bit more complicated than most watches (but, admittedly, I haven't tried to change the band on my watch).
But, the really nice part about this watch is the price: $150 USD. Basically half of what a Lineage watch costs. Why the difference? My guess is it comes down to the titanium and sapphire crystal, and the fact that the Lineage watch had to be imported. The difference in price before the current tariffs had gone into effect would have only been about $50.
I appreciate what the Wave Ceptor brings to the table. It's a great design for a person living an active lifestyle, especially if you don't have a need for a more dress-style watch. However, the Lineage is my ride-or-die. The titanium and sapphire crystal fit me better. However, I would recommend the Wave Ceptor over the Lineage to most people. Why? Simply the price difference. I cannot in good faith recommend a watch that is nearly double the price just for titanium and a sapphire crystal. And, especially for people in the United States, there appear to be more Wave Ceptors on the market than Lineage. Most of the Lineage watches have to be imported, and that might incur even more duties.
However, there is a small twist to this story. As I was researching these watches I learned that a lot of the Wave Ceptors from around the time of the WVA-M640B are no longer in production. They were discontinued in 2019, making it likely you will either have to turn to the secondary market, or find a new old stock, if you are lucky.
The Lineage line appears to have been around for a very long time. Many of the models I looked at had been refreshed / updated in 2024. Be careful if you are considering an older model as there is a chance that it won't be able to sync with the Atomic clock in North America. Instead, you may need to use an iOS or Android App to get it to sync. In my opinion—that's a nonstarter. I have wristwatches precisely because I want to break the dependence between my devices. It's the reason I don't have an Apple Watch or a Galaxy Watch.
There are a lot of Wave Ceptor and Lineage watches on the secondary market. It pays to do some research to know what you are getting before you purchase. The smart way to start is by looking up the module number for the watch you are considering. The module is what determines what features are included in the watch. By knowing the module number, you can generally find the documentation for the watch online. The watches I have all have module 5161, that is one of the things that I look for when buying a Lineage watch.
Another thing you can do (although I haven't found this to be completely reliable) is try decoding the serial number of the watch you are looking at. (If you can get the serial number.) This can tell you exactly when the watch was manufactured, which will tell you things like what version of MultiBand it has, which can then be used to determine if it will sync with the Atomic clock in your region.
Categories: #Review Tags: #wristwatches, #lineage, #waveceptor, #casio, #titanium, #sapphier, #resin License: Copyright Unattributed. Licensed under Creative Commons BY-NC-SA 4.0.
from
Unattributed
The view from Lake Michigan from Michigan City East Lighthouse, 2026-07-03.
Fri, July 3rd, 2026: All of these articles were in the Top 12 on Bubbles this morning: You Don't Have to Blog Like Me, Stop Writing for Bubbles, Re: Your Metablogging is Lame, Your Metablogging is Lame as Hell. If you went further there are a lot of similar articles, especially articles talking about blogging platforms. Yeah, so there is a writing obsession running through the Bubbles community. Well alright! Time for me to get on this train to fun and profit!!
Okay, okay, I'm joking. Mostly. Kinda. Definitely.
I agree with the sentiment that writing about writing, and writing about blogging platforms is (potentially) weak content. And that writing targeted simply to get clicks / become popular is lame. Do you know what is even weaker than those styles of content? Yup, you guessed it: complaining about those styles of content.
Metas in the world of writing have existed for just about forever. Longer than any of us have been around. And, guess what? There will continue to be metas in writing long after all of us have joined the ranks of a million monkeys banging on keyboards in another world.
Metas are something that come and go in communities, they are like the waves: sometimes larger and sometimes smaller but if the tides stopped completely we'd be in an even worse situation. Want to achieve low meta-tides? The best solution is to ignore them.
In my experience the thing that matters the most is having your own reason and purpose for writing, and not deviating from it. It's too easy to get distracted by the meta high tides. It can make you want to jump aboard that wave and ride it as far as you can. But in the end you are just left standing on the shore looking for the next big wave to ride.
I'm in the middle of migrating all of my old websites to this platform. Why? The platform I had been using has become a completely unusable mess over the last decade. It is, in my opinion, a top example of the enshittification of platforms. I mentioned it already on this blog as part of a conversation. But, I'm not turning it into content. Why? Covering the enshittification of that platform is a little too on-the-nose for me. Instead, I can stick to my guns and write about the things that I want to write about without the distraction (although, enshittification is well within the range of topics I'm interested in exploring).
The writing in communities like this is at its best when the authors have a sense of why they are writing. They find a core set of values and range of topics and ideas that they want to explore through those values. That makes for more diverse writing: everyone brings something different to the table even when covering the same topic. That makes for more natural and interesting interactions. Much more than everyone riding the next big meta wave.
Categories: #Opinion Tags: #meta, #metas, #enshittification, #blogging, #communities, #community, #waves, #writing License: Copyright Unattributed. Licensed under Creative Commons BY-NC-SA 4.0.
from Things Left Unsaid
When summer arrives I get some daylight for my morning commute walks to work. I get to see more and more minutes of daylight up to the solstice, and then it begins to taper off again. I always enjoy it while it lasts. Before it returns to the long months of walking in darkness.
One portion of the street I walk is high enough and unobstructed enough to see part of the Toronto skyline. On a clear day for a few minutes I can see the CN Tower way off in the distance.
Beside it now is the tallest building in Canada standing there like a middle finger to everyone who can't afford a place to live, and to all of us who can barely afford groceries. Just what we need, right, another 106 stories of housing that is unaffordable to the majority of the population.
I can also see the Absolute World towers downtown Mississauga. The ones that earned the nickname Marylin Monroe towers. More tall buildings have rose up in the area, making the negative space between the Marylin towers look like a huge hand with its index finger pointing down to the ground. There has to be something symbolic about that. We're going down, man.
One morning as the sun was rising I thought, the end of the world sure makes for pretty sunrises. Is that smog wafting northward from our deregulated neighbour (are they great again yet?). We are not innocent when it comes to environmental protection either. Better maybe, but better does not mean good when compared to the worst. Maybe that is smoke from wildfires, and not smog. Maybe both.
How many PPM's does the crap in the air have to be to make the news? I don't know. It doesn't count until you can taste it. Until you can smell it. Until your eyes are red and watering. Until that tickling in the back of your throat makes you cough. I could see the haze. It was fucking wonderful. It made the light sort of eerie, pastel, apocalyptic, with the sun just moments from rising above the horizon. I felt strange. Like a dream.
from
Field Notes
status: Active
What happened: EPA Ireland quietly released a lab bulletin noting microplastic presence in treated water samples from two plants in the southwest. Not a public advisory; buried in technical documentation.
Why it matters: Ireland has no binding microplastics standard. EU legislation is incoming. This is a precursor to mandatory monitoring and potential infrastructure upgrades.
Trajectory: Accelerating
dm action: Promote to Field Notes candidate only.
The EPA’s own research shows that microplastics are already present in Irish freshwater systems, and that they can enter treated water depending on plant processes and catchment conditions.
EPA Research 430 (2023) documents significant quantities of microplastics recorded in Irish freshwater environments, emphasising that river catchments are complex and that MPs can move through multiple pathways, including rainfall, land use, and atmospheric deposition.
EPA Research 377 (2021) confirms that Irish freshwater systems act as microplastic sinks, with risks from fragmentation into nanoplastics and trophic transfer. It stresses that Ireland lacks specific microplastics standards in freshwater policy.
Neither report directly states “treated drinking water contamination,” but both establish the precursor conditions: MPs are present in source waters, and Ireland has no binding microplastics standard — exactly the gap your Field Notes entry highlights.
Europe is further along in formalising monitoring:
The EU Drinking Water Directive (2020/2184) now requires the European Commission to adopt a methodology for detecting microplastics in drinking water.
That methodology was formally adopted in Delegated Decision (EU) 2024/1441, based on Joint Research Centre work showing that InfraRed and Raman micro‑spectroscopy are the most effective detection methods at real-world concentrations.
A 2026 ScienceDirect review confirms that microplastics are found in drinking water internationally, and that treatment processes vary in removal efficiency. Biofilm interactions within distribution systems can also influence persistence.
So: Europe is moving toward mandatory monitoring, and the scientific literature already shows MPs in treated water in multiple jurisdictions.
Ireland has not yet run a national programme specifically measuring microplastics in human tissues, but it has built the infrastructure to do so.
The HBM4IRE project (EPA Research 491, 2025) established Ireland’s capacity to run a national human biomonitoring programme for chemical exposures. It measures chemicals in blood/urine and aligns Ireland with EU human‑biomonitoring frameworks.
Important: HBM4IRE does not yet include microplastics, but it creates the governance, labs, and sampling protocols that would allow Ireland to add MPs as a monitored contaminant.
So: Ireland is structurally ready, but has not yet monitored microplastics in human bodies.
Europe has conducted biomonitoring studies that directly detect microplastics in human biological samples.
Two key strands:
1) Direct detection in human samples A 2026 ScienceDirect review summarises the evidence:
Microplastics have been detected in blood, lung tissue, placenta, faeces, and breast milk.
These detections come from multiple European labs using Raman/FTIR spectroscopy.
2) Integrated exposure–effect studies A 2025 NanoImpact article outlines an integrated approach for assessing exposure and early health effects in human populations exposed to micro‑ and nanoplastics.
It confirms that human exposure is occurring,
and that early biological effects can be measured.
Conclusion:
Europe has already confirmed microplastics inside human bodies. Ireland has not yet run its own population‑level MP biomonitoring, but is aligned with the EU system that is doing so.
Are these contaminants from the water supply, not the pipe network? Based on the evidence:
The Irish EPA freshwater studies show microplastics are present in source waters, meaning they can enter treated drinking water.
The EU Drinking Water Directive now requires monitoring of MPs at the treatment‑plant output, not the pipe network.
European distribution‑system studies show pipes can modify or accumulate MPs via biofilms, but they are not the primary source.
So the evidence confirms that when we talk about microplastics entering human bodies, the contamination pathway is overwhelmingly from the water supply (source water + treatment), not abrasion or shedding from national pipework.
The Big picture: what we know vs what we suspect
Confirmed: Microplastics and nanoplastics have been found in human blood, lungs, placenta, faeces, and breast milk.
[Definition: Microplastics are the larger particles (roughly 1 µm to 5 mm), while nanoplastics are the ultra‑small particles (below ~1 µm) that can cross biological barriers and behave more like chemicals than debris.]
Mechanisms: Lab and animal studies show they can trigger inflammation, oxidative stress, and may carry or leach chemicals (plasticisers, additives, adsorbed pollutants).
Uncertain but worrying: Long‑term, low‑dose exposure in humans-especially children-is not fully mapped yet, but the risk signals are strong enough that paediatric researchers are now treating this as an emerging health issue.
So we’re in that uncomfortable zone: enough evidence to be concerned, not enough to be complacent.
Inflammation & immune effects: Label: Local and systemic inflammation Animal and cell studies show microplastics can irritate tissues (gut, lungs), activate immune cells, and drive chronic low‑grade inflammation. Over time, that kind of background inflammation is linked to cardiovascular disease, metabolic disorders, and some cancers.
Chemical exposure “piggybacking”: Label: Carriers for other toxins Microplastics can carry additives (like BPA, phthalates) and adsorb pollutants (like heavy metals, persistent organic pollutants). Once inside the body, they may act as delivery vehicles, increasing local exposure in sensitive tissues.
Barrier crossing: Label: Crossing biological barriers Nanoplastics (the very small fraction) can cross biological barriers more easily-gut lining, possibly the blood–brain barrier, and the placental barrier. That raises concern for foetal and neurological development, even though human data are still emerging.
why they’re more at risk A 2026 review in Pediatric Research pulls this together under “Emerging role of microplastics and nanoplastics in children’s health.”
Higher exposure per kilogram:
Label: Dose relative to body size
Children drink more water and eat more food per kg of body weight than adults. If the supply is contaminated, their effective dose is higher.
Developing organs and systems: Label: Vulnerable development windows Immune, endocrine, neurological, and reproductive systems are still developing. Disruption during these windows-via inflammation or chemical exposure-can have lifelong consequences, even if the immediate effects are subtle.
Placenta and early life: Label: In‑utero and neonatal exposure Microplastics have been detected in human placenta and breast milk, meaning exposure can begin before birth and continue through early infancy. That’s why paediatric researchers are treating MPs as a potential contributor to immune dysregulation, allergy, and later chronic disease, even though causality is still being mapped.
What we don’t know yet (but should treat seriously) No long‑term cohort data yet: We don’t have 20‑year follow‑ups linking measured microplastic body burdens to specific diseases in humans.
Dose–response is unclear: We don’t know the threshold at which chronic exposure becomes clinically significant.
Interactions with other stressors: Microplastics don’t act alone—they interact with diet, air pollution, infections, and social determinants of health.
The current scientific stance is cautious but clear: minimise exposure, especially for children, while the evidence base catches up.
Field Notes are working briefs, not finished articles. This entry is part of my active reporting notes and is published here solely for transparency while I assess whether the issue warrants a full Marshall on Policy piece. It should not be read as a completed article, nor as public guidance.
status: Active
from
Rippple's Blog

Stay entertained thanks to our Weekly Tracker giving you next week's Anticipated Movies & Shows, Most Watched & Returning Favorites, and Shows Changes & Popular Trailers.
new Obsession+1 The Sheep Detectives+5 Citizen Vigilantenew Supergirl-1 Masters of the Universe-5 Michael-5 Voicemails for Isabelle+2 Tuner-2 Project Hail Marynew Little Brother= House of the Dragon= FROM= Rick and Morty= Dutton Ranch+2 The Bear= I Will Find You-2 Widow's Baynew Avatar: The Last Airbender-1 Cape Fear= The AgencyHi, I’m Kevin 👋. Product Manager at Trakt and creator of Rippple. If you’d like to support what I'm building, you can download Rippple for Trakt, explore the open source project, or go Trakt VIP.
from An Open Letter
I made it public, it’s not Perfect, and it’s kind of bad to say but I already feel like I’ve lost some amount of confidence in it. I guess I don’t really know what I expected, and I literally just made it public today and so I know it will take a little bit of time before I get like my first match or something like that, we even just the people that I’m seeing in my area don’t exactly inspire me with hope and I feel like it’s both a mixture of me feeling like a lot of these people don’t actually match my hopes for a long-term partner, and also I personally feel like I’m losing a little bit of confidence in how my profile will be NEVER MIND I JUST GOT MY FIRST MATCH LITERALLY RIGHT NOW WITH THE NOTIFICATION WE’RE SO FUCKING BACK
from Mitchell Report
⚠️ SPOILER WARNING: FULL SPOILERS

In “Project Hail Mary” (2026), a lone astronaut awakens to an uncertain mission, fighting for humanity's survival amid the vastness of space and the unknown.
My Rating: ⭐⭐⭐½ (3.5/5 stars)
Okay, first thing: overall, it wasn't a bad movie. The pacing drags at the beginning, and several scenes could have been explained more clearly or cut shorter. The second half and the ending are much stronger. The first half felt slow, and the premise is kind of stupid, but the story between the two main characters at the end is the best part.
Ryan Gosling was okay in this movie. The film was definitely too long. It's a so-so movie and not worth buying, but I'm glad it's included with my Prime subscription since it gave me something different to watch.
#review #movies
from
Talk to Fa
Women who aren’t afraid to say “I love you” will give birth to boys.
from Douglas Vandergraph

Chapter One
Long before anyone would try to Read the FULL Jesus in The Odyssey faith-based story, Jesus knelt where the ruined edge of Troy sloped toward the sea, His robe darkened at the hem by ash and salt. Behind Him, the city still breathed smoke through broken gates. In front of Him, the ships waited like tired animals pulled against their ropes, their black hulls scarred from years of war and their oars stacked in silence. Jesus prayed with His face turned toward the dawn, not loudly enough for the soldiers to hear, but with a stillness that made the wind seem careful around Him.
The men did not understand prayer like that. They had spent ten years learning the prayers of frightened kings, bargaining priests, and commanders who promised gifts to powers they did not trust. They knew the smell of sacrifice, the noise of victory songs, the wine spilled for names carved into temple stones. But this stranger’s prayer felt like the long road back to the Father, though none of them had words clean enough for it yet. It did not flatter the heavens. It did not tremble before the idols of the world. It entered the grief of the earth and stayed there with holy patience.
Odysseus watched from a broken place in the wall, though he would not have called it watching. He told himself he was measuring the weather, studying the line of the sea, listening for the temper of the morning. That was how he explained most things to himself. He could turn suspicion into strategy, grief into command, homesickness into calculation, and guilt into a problem that belonged to another day. Troy lay behind him, and Ithaca waited somewhere beyond the water, but the distance between the two had become more than sea.
A horse had opened the city. Fire had finished what cleverness began. Men called Odysseus wise for it, and some looked at him with hunger for praise, as if his mind had dragged the long war to its end by sheer force. He accepted their looks because leaders could not afford to appear uncertain. Yet whenever the wind shifted, and the smoke came low, he heard sounds that did not belong to victory. A child calling from behind a door. A woman weeping without words. A dying soldier gripping his wrist, unable to decide whether he wanted water or forgiveness.
He had not told his men about those sounds. He had not told himself either, not honestly. There were things a king could carry only by refusing to look at them in daylight.
Below him, near the shoreline, one of his sailors shoved another man away from a crate of bronze cups taken from a house inside the city. The man who fell had a bandaged thigh and moved with the slow caution of someone who had lost more blood than pride. Laughter rose. Someone said Ithaca would be rich when they returned. Someone else said a man deserved beauty after ten years of mud, fear, and sleeplessness.
Odysseus started toward them with anger ready, not because theft offended him now, but because disorder did. The war was over, and a disorderly army became a hungry beast. A hungry beast destroyed itself before the sea could.
Jesus stood before Odysseus reached the men.
He did not stand quickly. He rose as if nothing in Him answered to panic. The sailors lowered their voices without knowing why. The man with the bronze cups tightened his grip and tried to laugh, but the sound came out thin.
“What belongs to you?” Jesus asked.
The sailor blinked. “What I took.”
“From whom?”
The sailor looked toward Troy, then toward Odysseus, searching for the safer answer. “From the conquered.”
Jesus looked at the ruined city, and His face carried sorrow without surprise. “Does conquest make the dead generous?”
No one moved. Even the gulls seemed loud.
The sailor’s mouth hardened. “We paid for it. Ten years. Friends buried in foreign dirt. Wounds. Hunger. Fear. We paid.”
Jesus stepped closer, not threatening, not soft in the way weak men are soft, but gentle with a strength that needed no display. “Pain does not make another person’s grief your possession.”
Odysseus felt the words strike somewhere he had been guarding. He did not like that. “Stranger,” he said, “these men have crossed through blood for their kings. Do not judge what war has made necessary.”
Jesus turned toward him. His eyes were calm, but Odysseus felt no room in them for hiding. “I am not judging necessity. I am looking at what men call necessary when mercy has left them.”
The sailors shifted. A few stared down at the sand. One muttered that the stranger spoke like a priest. Another whispered that no priest of Troy would dare stand in an Achaean camp alive.
Odysseus came close enough to be heard by the men and not enough to seem pulled by the stranger’s presence. “Who are you?”
“Jesus of Nazareth.”
The name meant nothing to the men. No lineage followed it. No kingdom. No boast. Odysseus waited, because men who mattered always added something more.
Jesus did not.
“Nazareth,” Odysseus said. “I do not know that shore.”
“It is a small place.”
“Small places produce men who learn caution.”
“Sometimes they produce men who learn trust.”
Odysseus studied Him. The robe was simple. The hands were work-worn. The face was weary, but not in the way soldiers were weary. This was not the hollow exhaustion of a man who had spent himself on violence. It was the sorrow of someone who had looked directly at human ruin and refused to despise the ruined.
“You are far from home,” Odysseus said.
“So are you.”
For a moment the king of Ithaca heard the sea pulling the shingle back from the shore, stone by stone. He thought of Penelope standing in a doorway he had not seen in ten years. He thought of Telemachus, no longer the infant he left behind but a boy growing tall under the weight of an absent father’s name. He thought of his own house, and the thought cut so sharply that he covered it with a smile.
“My home waits for me.”
Jesus looked past him to the ships. “Then do not bring a stranger home in your own body.”
Odysseus’s smile faded. “Speak plainly.”
“You left as a husband, a father, a king, and a man. War has taught you how to survive without tenderness. If you return with only the part of yourself that learned to win, your house will receive a conqueror instead of the man they waited for.”
The words angered him because they sounded too close to fear. Odysseus had expected accusation from widows, envy from weaker kings, praise from those who admired a sharp mind, and suspicion from gods who disliked being outwitted. He had not expected a stranger in a smoke-stained robe to speak of his house as if he had stood in its courtyard.
“My house needs its master,” Odysseus said.
“Your house needs you whole.”
A laugh came from one of the younger sailors, nervous and foolish. “If he can make kings whole, let him mend our sail first.”
A few men laughed with him. Odysseus allowed it to pass. A leader sometimes used mockery the way a sailor used rope, to pull loose fear back into place. But Jesus did not defend Himself. He bent and helped the wounded man gather the things spilled in the sand, setting aside the stolen cups and lifting the man’s waterskin first.
The wounded sailor stared as if kindness confused him more than insult would have. “Lord, I can carry it.”
“I know,” Jesus said. “I am carrying it with you.”
That sentence unsettled Odysseus more than any rebuke. Commanders gave orders. Priests pronounced meanings. Kings took counsel. Heroes accepted songs. But this man knelt in ash with a common sailor and made the ground feel less abandoned.
A shout rose from the ships. The tide had turned. Men ran to the ropes and cargo, and the camp broke into movement. Bronze clanged. Oars slid into place. Mules brayed from the line of plunder. Smoke leaned over the shoreline like a hand trying to hold them there.
Odysseus walked beside Jesus toward the lead ship. “You spoke as if you mean to travel with us.”
“I do.”
“My men are not gentle company.”
“They are men.”
“The sea is not merciful.”
“Neither was the city, yet you walked through it.”
Odysseus stopped near the ramp. “Do you serve one of the powers who favor or trouble this voyage?”
Jesus turned fully toward him, and for the first time the air around them seemed to quiet in a deeper way. “I do not serve the powers men fear when they have forgotten God.”
The answer should have sounded like madness. Instead it landed with the weight of a stone dropped into a deep well.
Odysseus lowered his voice. “The sea has ears for pride.”
“Then let truth speak more quietly than pride and still be stronger.”
The king almost smiled at that. He liked strong answers, even when they troubled him. “And if Poseidon hates us?”
“Hatred is not lord over mercy.”
“You speak as if all the powers of the sea are small.”
“I speak as one who knows that the sea is not God.”
Odysseus looked away first. He hated that he did. Across the shore, his men were beginning to sing, not from joy but from the need to force courage into their own chests. They sang of home, though many no longer knew how to imagine it. They sang of wives who had aged without them, sons who might resent them, fields gone wild, fathers buried, mothers waiting near cold hearths. They sang because silence would have made the cost of Troy too clear.
The ships pushed out before noon. Troy shrank behind them, first into smoke, then into a bruise on the horizon, then into memory pretending to be distance. Jesus sat near the mast, where the shadow of the sail moved over His face. He spoke to no one unless someone spoke to Him first. A sailor with a fever leaned near Him and slept. Another man, who had killed three enemies in one day and bragged about it for years, began weeping into his hands after Jesus asked his name.
Odysseus kept to the stern. He told himself he was watching the line of the coast and the shape of the clouds. He was also watching the stranger.
Toward evening the wind changed. At first it merely worried the sail. Then it struck hard from the north, flattening the water into streaks and driving the ships away from the course Odysseus had chosen. Men cursed and grabbed ropes. The mast groaned. Waves shouldered the hull. The sky closed with a speed that felt personal.
“Reef the sail!” Odysseus shouted. “Hold her head! Not broadside, fools, not broadside!”
The sea rose ugly and green-black, no longer a road but a living wall. Rain hit like thrown gravel. The ships behind them appeared and vanished between waves, each lantern a brief, frightened eye. A man slipped near the bow and would have gone over if Jesus had not seized his wrist. The sailor screamed, not from pain but from the sight of the water clawing for him. Jesus pulled him back with a strength that made two nearby men stare, and then He placed the man’s hand on the rope.
“Hold here,” Jesus said.
“I cannot,” the man gasped.
“You can hold while help comes.”
The words were not thunder. They did not stop the storm. But the man held.
Odysseus fought the rudder until his shoulders burned. Every instinct in him sharpened. This he understood: danger with edges, men needing orders, wood needing force, a world that could be met by mind and muscle if a man refused to break. In the storm, his guilt had no voice. His homesickness had no face. Even grief had to wait its turn.
Then a wave rose higher than the rest, black under the cloud, and for one terrible instant it seemed to carry the whole weight of the sea. The men cried out. One called on Athena. Another on Zeus. Another on any god who would listen. Odysseus bared his teeth and shouted back at the wave as if defiance could cut water.
Jesus stood.
Odysseus saw Him through rain, one hand on the mast, His robe whipped against Him, His face lifted not in fear but in grief for frightened men. He did not call to the sea as though begging permission. He did not name Poseidon. He did not bargain. He looked at the storm as one looks at a thing that is fierce but not final.
“Father,” Jesus said, and though the word was quiet, Odysseus heard it beneath the roar. “Keep them from despair.”
The wave came. The ship climbed and dropped so violently that men slammed into benches and cargo broke loose. Water flooded the deck. The mast cracked but held. Somewhere in the dark a ship screamed apart, wood splitting like bone.
By midnight the storm had driven them into waters no man recognized. When the clouds tore open near dawn, the fleet was scattered. Some ships limped within sight. Others were gone. The sea had swallowed names before anyone could count them.
Odysseus stood dripping at the stern, hands raw from rope, eyes fixed on the empty places where ships should have been. He had lost men in battle. He had lost men to arrows, fever, and foolish charges. But this loss came after victory, after the dream of home had already entered their mouths. That made it cruel in a way he had not prepared for.
A young sailor asked, “King, what do we do?”
Odysseus wanted to answer at once. That was what he did. He turned terror into instruction before others could see it on him. He would count the ships, ration the stores, choose a course, make the men believe he had expected even this. He opened his mouth.
No words came.
Jesus stepped beside him but did not take command. He waited with him in the silence, and somehow that was worse than being corrected. Odysseus felt the men watching. He felt the old need rise in him, the need to be unshaken, clever, untouchable, already three thoughts ahead of death. He felt the wound under it, raw and hidden: if he could not control the world, he did not know who he was.
At last Jesus said, quietly enough that only Odysseus heard, “Tell them the truth first.”
Odysseus stared at the broken horizon. “A king gives certainty.”
“A false certainty is not leadership. It is fear wearing a crown.”
Odysseus’s jaw tightened. “And truth will feed them? Truth will gather the drowned? Truth will quiet the sea?”
“No. But truth will keep you from becoming another storm.”
The words entered him slowly. He hated them. He needed them. He could not tell which feeling was stronger.
He turned to the men. Their faces were gray with salt and exhaustion. Some were waiting for orders. Some were waiting for hope. Some were only waiting for the next terrible thing.
“We are driven from our course,” Odysseus said. His voice sounded rough, almost unfamiliar. “Some ships are missing. I do not know these waters.”
Fear moved through them.
He forced himself not to cover it too quickly.
“We will count what remains. We will search as long as daylight allows. We will repair what can be repaired. We will not waste food, strength, or blame. If any man saw a ship go down, he will speak. If any man is wounded, he will not hide it. I will not pretend the sea has not hurt us.”
No one cheered. It was not the kind of speech men sang later. But a strange steadiness passed through the deck. Men began to move, not because Odysseus had conquered their fear, but because he had finally stopped insulting it.
Jesus looked at him, and there was no triumph in His face.
Odysseus almost wished there had been. It would have made the moment easier to resist.
By afternoon, they found wreckage. A shield. A broken oar. A child’s carved horse one sailor had meant to bring home to his son. Odysseus picked it from the water himself. The toy was swollen, one painted eye nearly rubbed away. He stood with it in his palm longer than he meant to.
“What was his name?” Jesus asked.
Odysseus knew. He knew too many names. He had trained himself to keep them stored where they could not weaken his hand. “Mantes,” he said. “He came from a poor hill farm. He talked too much when frightened. He said his boy would not know his face.”
Jesus closed His eyes for a moment. “Then we will not let him become only wreckage.”
Odysseus swallowed. “Songs do not bring men home.”
“No. But remembrance keeps the living from using the dead as steps for their pride.”
The king looked at the small horse again. He wanted to say the stranger knew nothing of command, nothing of choices made where every mercy cost another life. But the words would not come. Jesus had walked through the ruin of Troy and had not looked away. He had stood in the storm and had not boasted when dawn came. He had told Odysseus to speak truth, and the ship had not fallen apart because of it.
As evening approached, land appeared low and green beyond the mist. The men saw trees and cried out with relief. They smelled earth before they reached it, a sweetness after smoke and salt. Some fell to their knees when the hull scraped sand. Others laughed like boys. A few simply crawled onto the shore and pressed their faces into grass.
Odysseus stepped down last. He wanted to feel triumph at the sight of land, but the carved horse weighed against his chest where he had tucked it beneath his cloak. He could feel it with every breath.
Jesus stood beside him, looking inland toward flowers that moved in the soft wind and figures approaching slowly from among the trees. Their faces were peaceful in a way that seemed almost empty. They carried blossoms and fruit, and their smiles held no urgency, no memory of storms, no hunger for home.
One of Odysseus’s men whispered, “Perhaps this is mercy.”
Odysseus looked at the green shore, the gentle hands, the open fruit, the promise of rest without questions. He thought of Troy, the storm, the missing ships, the names he had just been forced to remember. He thought of Ithaca, and for one dangerous moment Ithaca seemed unbearably far.
Jesus did not move toward the fruit.
He looked at Odysseus with sorrow, not because the island was ugly, but because it was beautiful in the wrong way.
“Not every prison has walls,” Jesus said.
Odysseus heard his men laughing among the flowers. He heard one say he wanted only to sleep. He heard another say perhaps home could wait one more day.
The king of Ithaca closed his hand over the hidden wooden horse and understood that the sea had not finished teaching him.
Chapter Two
The first men who tasted the flowers did not fall down like poisoned soldiers. They did not foam at the mouth, clutch their throats, or cry out for help. That was what made the danger harder to name. They smiled. They sat in the warm grass with the blossoms resting in their palms, and the strain left their faces so completely that the others envied them before they feared for them.
Odysseus watched from the beach with the anger of a man who had expected the world to strike from the front. Spears, storms, reefs, enemies, hunger, those things he understood. But this island offered shade, sweetness, and a silence so gentle it seemed almost holy. The people who lived there moved quietly among the trees, placing fruit into the hands of strangers, touching wounded shoulders as if no wound needed a story behind it. They did not ask where the ships had come from. They did not ask who had died. They did not ask where anyone was going.
That was the first lie of the island: nothing was required of a man except that he stop wanting.
One sailor named Philo sat with his back against a low tree and laughed as if he had never heard of Troy. His bandaged hand, still swollen from the storm, lay open on his knee. Purple juice stained his fingers. When Odysseus came near, Philo looked up with the soft confusion of a child awakened from pleasant sleep.
“Stand,” Odysseus said.
Philo blinked at him. “Why?”
The question disturbed the king more than defiance would have. Defiance had shape. It could be answered with command. This was emptiness wearing peace.
“Because Ithaca is not here,” Odysseus said.
“Ithaca.” Philo spoke the word slowly, as if it belonged to a song he had forgotten the tune to. “Was I going there?”
“You have a wife there.”
The man smiled toward the trees. “Do I?”
Odysseus reached down and took him by the front of the tunic. “You have a wife who waited through ten years of war, unless grief has already taught her not to. You have a little girl who was born the spring after we sailed. You carved her name into the underside of your oar because you said you wanted every stroke to bring you closer to her. Her name is Dione.”
For a breath, something troubled the sailor’s face. The sweetness in him flickered. Then one of the islanders pressed another petal into his hand, and the trouble dissolved. “She will be well,” Philo murmured. “Everything is well.”
Odysseus struck the blossom from his hand.
The islander stepped back, not frightened but disappointed, as if violence had interrupted a beautiful custom. Philo stared at the crushed flower in the grass and began to weep without understanding why. The sound drew other sailors, some angry, some frightened, some already chewing slowly with bright, vacant eyes.
Jesus came through them without hurry. He had not eaten. No sweetness stained His hands. He looked at the men in the grass, and the sorrow in His face was not contempt for their weakness. It was grief for how tired they were.
Odysseus turned on Him. “You warned me of a prison. Now help me get them out.”
Jesus knelt beside Philo, who had begun to rock forward and back, whispering that he did not want to remember. “Philo,” Jesus said, “what are you afraid will come back if the flower leaves you?”
The sailor pressed his hands to his ears. “The screams.”
Odysseus stiffened. Several men looked away.
Jesus lowered His voice. “Whose screams?”
Philo shook his head hard, like a man trying to throw off a hook. “I do not know. I know all of them. I know the boys at the wall. I know the man I killed after he dropped his spear. I know my brother calling from the trench when I could not pull him free. I know my little girl’s name, but I cannot see her face, and I am afraid if I go home she will look at me as if I am a stranger.”
Odysseus’s grip tightened on the hilt of his sword. Not because he meant to draw it, but because his hand wanted something familiar. Around him, the island’s softness had become unbearable. The flowers had not merely stolen memory. They had offered mercy without truth, comfort without healing, rest without return.
Jesus placed one hand over Philo’s stained fingers. “Forgetting pain is not the same as being free from it.”
Philo cried harder. “I cannot carry it.”
“No,” Jesus said. “Not alone.”
Odysseus looked toward the ships. Men were drifting inland in twos and threes. The longer they waited, the more names would sink beneath the sweetness. He could drag them back. He had dragged men from fires, trenches, drunkenness, rage, and fear. A body could be hauled where a heart refused to go.
“We bind them,” he said. “All who have eaten. We carry them if they resist.”
Jesus looked up at him. “Bring them back, but do not despise them for wanting the pain to stop.”
“They are abandoning their homes.”
“They are drowning on dry land.”
Odysseus hated the mercy in that sentence because it slowed him. His men were slipping away while Jesus insisted on seeing them as wounded instead of disobedient. Yet when he looked again, truly looked, he did not see lazy men. He saw soldiers whose courage had finally found a place to collapse.
“Then help me wake them,” he said.
Jesus stood and walked among the men. He did not preach at them. He did not shame them. He called their names when He knew them, and when He did not, He asked another man to speak it. He asked about wives, mothers, sons, brothers, vineyards, fishing nets, unfinished walls, graves needing tending, fields gone wild, songs sung by children who would be taller now. The island fought back with sweetness. The blossoms loosened faces, softened eyes, bent memories away from home. Some men cursed Jesus for reminding them. Some begged Him to leave them in peace. One tried to crawl deeper into the flowers and bit the hand of the sailor who reached for him.
Odysseus did bind some of them. He ordered it with a hard voice and wet eyes, and he hated that Jesus saw both. Men who had fought beside him now thrashed like captives while their friends carried them toward the surf. The islanders watched with pity that was colder than hatred. They seemed unable to understand why anyone would choose grief over comfort.
At the waterline, Philo stopped resisting. He sagged between two sailors and looked at the ships as if seeing them through fog. “Dione,” he whispered.
Odysseus heard it.
Jesus heard it too. “That is a good beginning,” He said.
Philo turned toward Him, ashamed. “Will the memories come back?”
“Yes.”
The man closed his eyes.
“And you will not be alone when they do,” Jesus said.
By dusk the ships were away from the island, and the fragrance of the flowers faded behind them. No victory song rose. The rescued men lay exhausted in the hulls, tied loosely now, not as prisoners but because some still woke reaching for sweetness. Others sat beside them and spoke homeward names into the dark like men feeding small fires.
Odysseus stood near the stern with Jesus. The sea had become calmer, but not kind. It carried the ships as though withholding judgment until later.
“I thought they were weak,” Odysseus said.
Jesus looked over the water. “They were tired.”
“Tired men can still betray a voyage.”
“Yes.”
The honesty surprised him. “You do not excuse them?”
“I tell the truth about them. That is not the same as excusing.”
Odysseus rubbed salt from his beard. “If I had listened only to pity, we would still be there.”
“If you had listened only to anger, some of them would have returned with their bodies and remained lost inside.”
The king had no answer. He thought of Philo whispering his daughter’s name as if it were a rope thrown across deep water. He thought of his own son. Telemachus would not know the sound of his father’s steps. Penelope might know them and still wonder what kind of man had entered her door.
Late that night, when the moon spread itself thin over the waves, Odysseus found Jesus sitting beside one of the bound men. The sailor slept uneasily, his lips moving around broken fragments of names. Jesus had one hand resting on the rope, not loosening it, not tightening it, simply present.
Odysseus lowered himself across from Him. “You let me bind them.”
“I did not call the rope cruel when the man was walking toward death.”
“You speak as if mercy can have teeth.”
“Mercy without truth is a flower that makes men forget their daughters. Truth without mercy is a hand that drags a wounded man and calls the wound rebellion.”
Odysseus looked away toward the black outline of the mast. “You enjoy making simple things difficult.”
“No,” Jesus said. “I came because difficult things have been called simple for too long.”
The words stayed with Odysseus after Jesus fell silent. He had spent years surviving by dividing the world quickly: friend and enemy, wise and foolish, useful and useless, brave and cowardly. A commander could not pause forever over every inner life. War punished hesitation. The sea punished confusion. Yet Jesus kept opening hidden rooms inside men Odysseus thought he already understood.
The next morning brought a hard blue sky and a wind that seemed finally willing to serve. They sailed past empty rocks and narrow spits of sand, then toward a larger island where goats moved on the hills and smoke rose faintly beyond a ridge. Hunger sharpened the men. Their stores had been damaged in the storm. Water casks had cracked. More than one sailor looked at the grazing animals as if he could already taste meat.
Odysseus sent men ashore to fill skins from a stream and cut wood for repairs. The island seemed wild, without plowed fields or harbor walls. Across a channel stood another land, darker and higher, with cliffs like broken teeth. Caves opened in the stone above the shore. The smoke came from there.
One of the older sailors spat into the sand. “No city. No law. Whoever lives there lives like a beast.”
“Beasts do not always build smoke,” Odysseus said.
“They may have stores,” another said. “Cheese, grain, wine, skins. We cannot cross homeward seas on hope.”
Odysseus watched the far cliffs. His mind began moving ahead, weighing danger against need, need against opportunity. A cave could hold food. A lawless shepherd might be tricked, bargained with, or beaten. A few bold men could return with enough to strengthen the whole fleet.
Jesus stood beside the stream, washing blood from a sailor’s reopened wound. He did not look toward the cliffs, yet Odysseus knew He was aware of them.
“You think I should not go,” Odysseus said when he approached.
“I think hunger tells the truth about a man’s trust.”
“Hunger also kills men who wait for perfect virtue.”
Jesus wrapped the sailor’s arm with a strip of clean cloth. “Then go for need, not for glory.”
Odysseus gave a short laugh. “Glory does not milk goats.”
“No, but it walks into caves and calls it leadership.”
The king’s patience thinned. “My men need food.”
“Then take men who can remember they are looking for food.”
“I know how to enter danger.”
Jesus rose and looked at him. “That is not the same as knowing why you enter it.”
Odysseus wanted to dismiss the warning. He nearly did. But the memory of the lotus island still clung to him. He had mistaken wounded men for deserters. Perhaps he could mistake pride for necessity too. The thought angered him because it was possible.
“I will take twelve,” he said. “No more. We seek food. We do not boast. We do not provoke.”
Jesus held his gaze. “And if you meet power without mercy?”
Odysseus glanced toward the cliffs. “Then we survive it.”
Jesus’s face saddened. “That has been your answer for too long.”
They crossed the channel in a smaller boat before the afternoon waned. Jesus came with them. Odysseus did not invite Him, but neither did he forbid Him. A part of him wanted the stranger near, though he would have named it caution, curiosity, or use. The truer name frightened him: he wanted someone aboard who could look at him and know when he was lying to himself.
The cave mouth was larger than it had seemed from across the water. It opened high in the cliffside, with a path worn by heavy feet leading up from the shore. Inside, the air smelled of animals, sour milk, smoke, and damp stone. Pens built from rough timber held lambs and kids. Shelves cut into the wall carried cheeses wrapped in leaves. Skins hung from pegs. The men stared like starving wolves trying to remember they were human.
“We take and go,” one whispered.
Odysseus lifted a hand. “No. We wait for the master.”
Several men turned in disbelief. His own words surprised him. The old Odysseus would have stripped the cave clean and called speed wisdom. But Jesus stood near the entrance, watching him, and Odysseus felt the difference between need and theft more sharply than he wanted to.
“We will ask hospitality,” Odysseus said.
A sailor laughed under his breath. “From a cave beast?”
“From whoever owns what we did not make,” Odysseus said, and the sentence felt awkward in his mouth, like a tool he had not yet learned to use.
They waited. The light outside turned gold, then red. The goats shifted and bleated. One of the men cut a small piece of cheese and ate it before Odysseus could stop him. Another hissed that a taste was not theft if they meant to ask. Fear and hunger made every man a lawyer.
Then the ground trembled.
At first Odysseus thought it was rockfall. Dust loosened from the cave roof. The animals pressed back in their pens. A shadow crossed the entrance, blocking the last of the light, and a figure stooped into the cave carrying a bundle of wood against one shoulder.
The creature was shaped like a man only in the broadest sense, as if cruelty had taken a human outline and swollen it beyond proportion. One eye burned beneath a heavy brow. His beard hung in ropes. His hands were large enough to close around a man’s chest. He smelled of blood, milk, smoke, and loneliness that had curdled into rage.
The sailors stumbled backward. Odysseus forced himself to stand still.
The Cyclops dropped the wood with a crash that shook the cave. His one eye moved over the strangers, slow and bright with appetite. “Little thieves,” he said, and his voice filled the hollow stone.
“We are not thieves,” Odysseus answered. “We are men driven by storm, seeking food and the custom owed to travelers.”
The Cyclops laughed. It was not mirth. It was a rockslide with breath. “Custom?”
Jesus stepped forward before Odysseus could shape another clever answer. “They are hungry men far from home.”
The great eye shifted to Him. Something in the creature’s face changed, not into fear exactly, but into a recognition he hated. “You smell of no altar I know.”
“I do not belong to your altars,” Jesus said.
The Cyclops leaned close, nostrils widening. “All men belong to hunger.”
“No,” Jesus said. “Many men serve it, but hunger is a poor master.”
Odysseus felt the cave tighten around the words. He had heard kings insult kings with less danger. The Cyclops stared at Jesus, then at the sailors, then back again.
“I am Polyphemus,” the creature said. “This cave is mine. The goats are mine. The cheese is mine. The stones are mine. What enters and cannot leave is mine.”
He turned and rolled a boulder across the entrance with a motion so brutal and easy that the men cried out despite themselves. Darkness swallowed the cave except for a small fire Polyphemus stirred to life. The stone sealed them in with the smell of animals and the sound of their own breathing.
Odysseus’s mind began racing. Count the men. Measure the stone. Watch the hands. Find a weapon. Wine, if they still had it. A name, perhaps. A trick. He reached for thought the way a drowning man reaches for wreckage.
Jesus looked at him across the dimness, and Odysseus knew what He saw: not merely a king planning escape, but a man already tempted to worship his own cleverness again.
Polyphemus seized the sailor who had stolen the cheese.
The man screamed. His name was Leandros. He was young, too young for the war he had survived, and his fear filled the cave with a sound no commander could use. Odysseus lunged, but two men grabbed him because the Cyclops had lifted Leandros beyond the reach of any sword. Jesus moved too, not with panic, but with terrible grief.
“Do not do this,” Jesus said.
Polyphemus bared his teeth. “No law reaches here.”
Jesus’s voice deepened, and every man in the cave felt it. “God sees here.”
For one moment, the Cyclops paused. The fire snapped. The goats trembled. Odysseus held his breath, though he did not know whether he hoped for mercy or merely time.
Then Polyphemus laughed and committed the darkness he had chosen.
The cave changed after that. It was still stone, fire, animals, men, and a giant near the entrance, but something had been torn in the air. The sailors drew close to one another, shaking. Odysseus felt a rage so clean and hot that it almost comforted him. Rage gave him shape. Rage told him what to do. Rage promised that he would not have to feel helpless if he could become dangerous enough.
Jesus knelt where Leandros had fallen. There was little to gather, but He touched the ground as if even that ruined place deserved witness. His lips moved in prayer. Not to the cave. Not to the monster. Not to any trembling idol men might imagine ruling the cliffs. He prayed to the Father with the same quiet authority He had carried at Troy and on the sea, and the prayer made the darkness feel accused.
Odysseus came near Him, shaking with fury. “If your Father sees, why does He not strike him down?”
Jesus looked up, and there was pain in His eyes, but no surrender to despair. “Is that the only justice you understand?”
“It is the justice this cave understands.”
“And if you leave this cave with only the cave inside you, what has been saved?”
Odysseus almost shouted at Him. A man was dead. Others would follow. The stone was sealed. A monster watched them with the satisfaction of a tyrant who believed size was truth. This was no place for riddles about the soul.
But Jesus did not look away from him. That was the hardest part. Not the Cyclops. Not the stone. Not even the death. The hardest part was being seen in the instant when hatred felt most reasonable.
Polyphemus settled near the entrance, laughing softly to himself while he drank from a skin and wiped his mouth with the back of his hand. At last he stretched out, blocking the sealed stone with his body, and sleep overtook him like another form of violence. His breathing filled the cave in heavy waves.
The men waited until the sound deepened. Then they gathered around Odysseus in the dark.
“King,” one whispered, “tell us you have a way.”
Of course they asked him. Of course they needed him to become certainty again. The old desire rose in him, fierce and familiar. He wanted to give them the look that had carried armies through impossible gates. He wanted to become the mind no beast could defeat. He wanted to save them in a way that would make the story belong to him.
Jesus stood nearby, silent.
Odysseus looked from the sleeping giant to the men, then toward the place where Leandros had died. The cave had shown him brute power without mercy. Now it was asking whether he would answer with cleverness without humility.
“We will live if God permits,” Odysseus said at last, the words difficult but honest. “And we will think carefully because panic serves the monster.”
The men waited.
Odysseus picked up a length of green olive wood Polyphemus had brought in with the firewood. It was thick, heavy, and not yet hardened by flame. “This may become a weapon,” he said. “But no man acts for vengeance alone. We act to leave. We act so no more names are swallowed here.”
A few sailors nodded, though their faces remained strained and pale.
Odysseus turned the wood in his hands. He could already see the plan forming: sharpen it, harden it in the coals, wait until the creature drank deeply, strike the eye, escape beneath the animals when the flock was let out. His mind moved with its old brilliance, and for the first time he felt afraid of that brilliance, not because it was useless, but because it could become a throne.
He looked at Jesus. “Will you stop me?”
Jesus stepped closer, His face lit by the low fire. “I will stop you from becoming what you hate if you let Me.”
Outside the stone, the sea moved unseen against the shore. Inside, Odysseus held the rough wood and listened to the breathing of the monster, the trembling of his men, and the voice of a truth he had not invited but could no longer escape.
For the first time since Troy, he understood that getting home might require more than surviving his enemies. It might require being rescued from the part of himself that knew exactly how to defeat them.
Chapter Three
The cave did not sleep just because the monster did. Men dozed in broken pieces, waking at every shift of Polyphemus’s enormous body, every grinding breath, every mutter from his throat. The fire sank low, then was fed again in silence. The goats huddled in their pens as if even animals knew that the stone walls had become a mouth.
Odysseus worked with the olive wood while the others watched. He shaved it with a knife, slow stroke after slow stroke, turning the rough branch into a sharpened stake. His hands steadied as the point took shape. That frightened him more than trembling would have. The moment his mind found a plan, part of him became calm, and the calm felt dangerously close to pleasure.
Jesus sat near the wounded and the terrified. One man had bitten through the inside of his lip to keep from crying out. Another kept whispering Leandros’s name, as if saying it enough times might prevent the cave from swallowing him completely. Jesus did not tell them to be brave. He did not demand silence as proof of manhood. He gave water to those who could drink, steadied those who shook, and prayed quietly in a corner of the cave where the firelight barely reached.
Odysseus sharpened the wood and tried not to listen.
But prayer has a way of troubling a man who wants his anger undisturbed.
At last he carried the stake to the coals and turned it until the green wood hissed and hardened. The smell rose bitter and living, like a tree being taught the language of violence. One of the sailors leaned close and whispered, “We should kill him in his sleep.”
Odysseus did not look away from the fire. “If he dies there, his body stays before the stone, and we die beside him.”
“Then we cut him apart.”
“With what strength? With what time? While the goats scream and the cave fills with blood?” Odysseus turned then, and his eyes were hard. “No. We blind him. We wait. He must move the stone to release the flock. We leave beneath what he thinks belongs to him.”
The men stared, some with hope, some with horror, all with need.
Jesus stood and came near. “Do what must be done to live,” He said. “But remember why you are doing it.”
Odysseus gave a dry, humorless breath. “You keep saying that, as if a man can separate survival from fury when a friend has been killed before his eyes.”
“He can, if he refuses to let the killer become his teacher.”
Odysseus’s hand tightened around the stake. “You would have me pity him?”
“I would have you see the truth. Pity is not the same as surrender. Mercy is not the same as refusing to stop evil. But hatred will ask to be paid after it helps you escape.”
The words entered the cave and did not leave. Odysseus looked toward Polyphemus. The Cyclops slept with one arm flung across the stone floor, his fingers curled like hooks. In the firelight he seemed less like a beast from old songs and more like a warning carved into flesh: appetite without gratitude, strength without compassion, solitude without repentance. He had become enormous by refusing every smallness that makes a man human.
Odysseus looked away first. “Then pray I do not pay too much.”
“I am praying you do not sell what remains of you.”
Near dawn, Polyphemus woke.
The men froze. The Cyclops sat up with a thick groan, reached blindly toward the pens, then remembered his captives and smiled. The smile told them he had dreamed no better than he lived. He removed the stone enough to let a gray strip of morning enter, drove the male goats out, then sealed the entrance again before any man could rush it. The brief sight of sky almost broke them.
Before the day climbed high, Polyphemus took another man.
Odysseus could not save him. Neither could rage, cleverness, leadership, memory, title, strength, or ten years of war. Jesus spoke again, His voice full of warning and sorrow, and again Polyphemus chose himself. When it was done, the cave held two dead names instead of one.
That second death changed the men. Fear hardened into obedience. No one argued now. No one whispered about stealing cheese. No one mistook hunger for the worst thing a man could face.
When evening came, Odysseus offered Polyphemus wine from the skin they had carried from the ship. It was strong, dark, and meant for a safer shore. The Cyclops drank greedily, laughed at the burn of it, demanded more, and praised no one but himself for receiving it. Odysseus stood before him, measuring each moment.
“What are you called, little schemer?” Polyphemus asked, his one eye gleaming wetly in the firelight.
Odysseus felt the old impulse rise: to name himself, to make even danger acknowledge him, to leave a mark on the story that could not be rubbed out. But Jesus’s words moved in him like a hand pressed against a wound.
“No man worth boasting of tonight,” Odysseus said. “Only a hungry traveler who wants to live.”
The Cyclops laughed and drank again. “Then I will remember no man.”
Odysseus lowered his gaze so the triumph in it would not show. “That may be best.”
The wine did its work. Polyphemus slumped, muttered, cursed his animals, laughed at nothing, and finally fell into a sleep so heavy that his breath shook dust from the walls. The men waited until Odysseus lifted his hand. Then they moved together.
Four sailors bore the stake. Odysseus guided the point. Jesus did not take hold of the weapon, but He stood near the men whose courage nearly failed, and His presence kept panic from breaking their silence. When the fire-hardened point was driven into the great eye, the cave exploded with sound.
Polyphemus screamed. The goats screamed. The men stumbled back, some sobbing, some gagging, some nearly crushed beneath the monster’s flailing hands. Odysseus dragged one sailor clear by the belt. Another would have been kicked into the wall if Jesus had not pulled him away with sudden strength.
The Cyclops tore the stake free and hurled it across the cave. Blood streamed over his face. He staggered to the stone and heaved it aside, not from mercy but from agony, calling into the morning for the neighboring giants who lived among the cliffs. His voice rang from rock to rock, a wounded tyrant begging witnesses.
“Who has ruined you?” came a distant roar.
Polyphemus shouted the answer the wine and pride had left him.
The cliffs answered with confusion. No rescuer came.
Odysseus had no time to admire the trick. He forced the men beneath the bellies of the largest rams, binding them with strips of torn cloth and rope. It was humiliating, filthy, and brilliant. The sailors who survived by sword now escaped beneath animals. That, too, felt like a lesson Odysseus had not asked to learn.
Jesus stood beside him as the last men were secured. “You next,” Odysseus said.
Jesus looked toward the entrance, where the blinded Cyclops crouched with hands spread, feeling the backs of the animals as they passed. “You go first.”
“I do not leave last because I am afraid.”
“I know.”
“I leave last because I am king.”
Jesus met his eyes. “Then leave last as a shepherd, not as a man who wants the song to notice.”
Odysseus stared at Him for one breath, then another. Outside, the flock was moving. The time for argument had gone. He bound himself beneath the last great ram, his cheek pressed into coarse wool, his sword awkward against his side. The animal lurched forward. Polyphemus’s hands came down over its back. Odysseus held his breath while the fingers searched the fleece above him.
“My strong one,” the Cyclops muttered to the ram, his voice broken by pain. “Why do you leave last? Do you grieve for your master’s eye?”
Odysseus felt the hand pass inches from his body. He could smell blood and wine on the giant’s skin.
The ram moved on.
Outside, sunlight struck him like mercy. The men cut themselves free, gathered near the path, and hurried down toward the shore. Jesus came behind them, unbound, walking through the opened way with calm that no cave could explain. Odysseus did not ask how. He was too busy forcing his men to silence, too busy counting the living, too busy feeling the air enter him as if he had been born again and did not yet trust it.
They reached the boat. They pushed into the surf. Oars bit water. The cliffs began to fall behind.
Then Polyphemus came stumbling from the cave mouth, blind face lifted to the sea, rage pouring from him in broken curses. He tore a rock from the hillside and hurled it. The stone struck the water near the boat, raising a wave that nearly overturned them. Men shouted and rowed harder.
Odysseus felt triumph surge in him, hot and wild. They were alive. The monster was wounded. The plan had worked. The cave had not kept him. Death had not outwitted him. Something inside him wanted the cliffs themselves to know.
Jesus looked at him, and the warning was already there.
Do not.
Odysseus gripped the side of the boat until his knuckles whitened. The name pressed against his teeth. He had swallowed it once inside the cave, and the swallowing had felt like obedience. Now victory demanded payment. The old hunger returned with a voice smoother than wine: Let the beast know who mastered him. Let the world know you are not merely a survivor but Odysseus of Ithaca. Let no one say you escaped like a frightened thief beneath an animal.
“Row,” Jesus said softly.
The sailors bent to the oars.
Polyphemus roared again from the shore, calling them cowards, nameless rats, meat that had slipped his hand.
Odysseus stood.
Jesus rose too. “Odysseus.”
The king heard his name from Jesus’s mouth, and for a heartbeat it was enough. It sounded like a man being called back from a ledge.
Then pride answered louder.
“Tell the cliffs who beat you,” Odysseus shouted over the water. “Tell your darkness that Odysseus of Ithaca, son of Laertes, left you blind in your own cave.”
The men went still except for the oars. Even the sea seemed to listen.
Polyphemus froze. Then his ruined face twisted, not only with rage but with recognition. He lifted both hands toward the unseen sky and called on the sea-power that had long been feared by sailors, not as a servant calls a good master, but as bitterness calls bitterness. The air changed. Far out, beyond the calmer channel, the water darkened.
Jesus closed His eyes, and grief moved across His face.
Odysseus sat down slowly. The triumph drained from him, leaving something colder.
One of the sailors whispered, “Why did you do that?”
Odysseus had no answer that would not shame him.
They reached the ships, but no one greeted them with celebration. The dead were counted. The stolen cheese they had taken in the confusion tasted like dust. By nightfall the wind rose again, and though the sea did not yet strike, every man felt that the voyage had been marked.
For two days they sailed under a tense sky. Odysseus gave orders cleanly and spoke little. Jesus did not rebuke him before the men. That silence was its own mercy and its own judgment. Odysseus almost wished He would speak harshly, because then he could defend himself. Instead Jesus helped mend sails, shared food with the grieving, and sat beside the men who had escaped the cave but woke clawing at their own faces.
On the third day, they came to the island of a king who kept the winds. His halls stood high above a harbor ringed with bronze-colored stone, and banners snapped though the air itself seemed obedient there. Aeolus received Odysseus with feasting and questions, delighted by stories of Troy, storms, and the giant’s cave. He wanted every clever turn, every peril, every moment where human wit had slipped through death’s fingers.
Odysseus told the story well. Too well.
He did not lie about the deaths, but he arranged them around his own courage. He did not hide Jesus, but he did not know how to explain Him, so he placed Him in the tale like a holy witness rather than the one who had held the men from becoming beasts themselves. Aeolus listened with bright eyes, and the sailors warmed under the attention. After so much fear, admiration felt like bread.
Jesus sat at the lower table with servants, widows of shipwrecked men from other shores, and a child who had not spoken since seeing her father drown. Aeolus had offered Him a place of honor, but Jesus had taken the place where grief had gathered.
During the feast, Odysseus noticed Him there. He noticed the child leaning against Jesus as if she had found a quiet wall against the world. He noticed the servants listening while Jesus spoke to them with the same care He gave kings. Something in Odysseus resisted the sight, not because it was wrong, but because it measured him.
After many days, Aeolus prepared a gift: a heavy leather bag bound with shining cord, sealed against the wild winds that might drive the fleet from home. He spoke proudly of it before the men, saying the road to Ithaca would open if Odysseus guarded what had been gathered. A west wind would carry them where they longed to go.
The sailors stared at the bag with wonder. Some saw salvation. Some saw treasure. Some saw power.
Odysseus saw responsibility, but also advantage. At last, a thing he could hold. At last, a danger tied shut.
Jesus came to him before departure. The harbor below was full of morning light, and the fleet waited in clean wind.
“Tell them what it is,” Jesus said.
Odysseus looked down at the bag. “They know enough.”
“They know it is important. That is not the same as knowing the truth.”
“If they know too much, fear will make them foolish.”
“If they know too little, suspicion will.”
Odysseus’s patience tightened. “I cannot explain every burden to every man.”
“No. But secrecy that protects others is different from secrecy that protects control.”
The king turned toward Him. “You think I learned nothing from the cave.”
“I think you learned enough to be tested again.”
Odysseus hated that answer because he knew it was true. Still, he did not gather the men. He did not explain the bag. He told himself discipline would carry them. He told himself they only needed home before them and his command above them. He told himself a leader sometimes had to hold knowledge alone.
The wind carried them sweetly for nine days.
Ithaca came close enough to rise from the sea like a promise. Men cried when they saw the dark line of familiar hills. Even those from other islands shouted as if one man’s home meant all homes were possible. Odysseus stood at the stern and looked until his eyes burned. He saw in memory the olive tree near his bedchamber, Penelope’s hands at the loom, Telemachus running on small legs he no longer had. He had thought so often of returning that the real shore seemed less real than the thought.
Exhaustion overtook him near dawn. He had guarded the bag himself every hour, refusing help. His body surrendered before his will consented. He slept with Ithaca in sight.
While he slept, suspicion moved among the men like a small dark flame.
They had watched him guard the bag. They had heard the cords creak. They had seen no food come from it, no tool, no sailcloth, no medicine. The old wounds of command opened. Had the king hidden gold? A prize from Aeolus? Payment meant for all? A treasure to bring Penelope while poorer men returned with scars and empty hands?
Philo, still pale from the lotus island, tried to stop them. “He would have told us if it were treasure.”
Another sailor laughed bitterly. “Kings tell what keeps kings safe.”
Jesus was near the bow, praying as morning thinned the dark. He opened His eyes and stood, but not every human choice is stopped before it reveals the heart. By the time His hand reached the first man’s shoulder, the cord had been cut.
The bag opened.
The winds came out like prisoners enraged by freedom. The sea turned white. The ships spun. Ithaca vanished behind storm and spray. Men screamed, not because they did not understand what they had done, but because they understood too late. Odysseus woke to chaos, seized the empty bag, and stared at the ruined mouth of it as if looking into his own soul.
Jesus gripped the mast while the ship drove backward across the water. His face was wet with rain and sorrow.
Odysseus shouted orders until his voice tore. The men obeyed, but obedience could not rebind what mistrust had opened. By night they were far from Ithaca again, flung into waters that mocked every mile they had gained.
When the storm finally weakened, the fleet drifted into a harbor surrounded by towering cliffs. The entrance was narrow, the water inside strangely still. Men were too exhausted to distrust it. Only Odysseus held his ship outside the mouth, anchored beyond the rocks, because some instinct in him had survived even shame.
The ships within the harbor began to settle.
From the cliffs above came movement.
At first the sailors thought the figures were men. Then stones began to fall. Massive hands hurled boulders from the heights, smashing hulls as if they were clay bowls. The Laestrygonians descended with hunger in their cries, giants of appetite and cruelty, not one monster in a cave but a whole people shaped by devouring. Ships broke. Men leaped into blood-dark water. Oars snapped. The harbor became a trap filled with splintered wood and human voices.
Odysseus watched in horror from beyond the entrance. His own ship was spared only because he had not entered fully. That fact did not comfort him. It condemned him in a different way.
“Cut the anchor!” he shouted.
His men hacked the rope. The ship lurched free. Survivors tried to swim toward them, and Odysseus ordered ropes thrown. They pulled up whom they could. Too few. Far too few.
Jesus stood at the rail, reaching for a sailor whose face kept slipping beneath the water. Odysseus seized Jesus by the back of the robe when a wave nearly took Him over.
“You will fall,” Odysseus shouted.
Jesus stretched farther. “So did he.”
They caught the man by the wrist and dragged him aboard. Behind them, another ship vanished under a falling stone. The sound entered Odysseus and stayed.
When open sea finally received them again, only one ship remained.
No one spoke for a long time. The surviving men sat among rescued strangers and stared at the empty horizon where their companions should have been. The fleet that left Troy with songs, loot, wounds, and longing had become one battered vessel carrying grief too large for its deck.
Odysseus stood apart until Jesus came to him.
“Do not tell me this was only pride,” Odysseus said before Jesus spoke. His voice was low, ragged, stripped of kingly polish. “The men opened the bag. The giants crushed the ships. The sea drove us. The world is full of teeth.”
“Yes,” Jesus said.
Odysseus turned, almost angry at the agreement. “Then what do you want from me?”
Jesus looked at the men scattered across the deck. “To stop using the world’s cruelty as permission to hide your own.”
Odysseus flinched as if struck.
“You were wrong to hide the truth. They were wrong to mistrust. The storm was cruel. The giants were cruel. Loss is not simple because guilt is shared. But a man who wants to come home must stop asking which part of the ruin belongs to someone else before he confesses the part that belongs to him.”
The sea rolled beneath them. Odysseus looked at his hands. They were cracked, salted, bruised, still strong enough to grip a sword, still useless to gather the dead.
“I wanted them to trust me,” he said.
Jesus’s voice softened. “You wanted them to need no truth except your command.”
The words broke something that the storm had not. Odysseus sat down on a coil of rope, not like a king taking counsel, but like a man whose legs had finally understood the weight of him.
“I saw Ithaca,” he whispered.
“I know.”
“I saw it.”
Jesus sat beside him. “And still you are not home.”
Odysseus covered his face with one hand. For the first time, he did not care who saw.
By the time they reached the island of Circe, the men were hollow with hunger, sorrow, and fear. The shore was thick with trees, and somewhere inland smoke rose from a house hidden among them. No one cheered at the sight of land. They had learned that beauty could drug a man, caves could eat him, gifts could test him, harbors could slaughter him, and the sea could give Ithaca to the eye before tearing it away from the hand.
Odysseus divided the men carefully. He did not speak as if certainty lived in him. He told them the truth: they needed food, they needed rest, and they did not know what waited beneath the trees. Some looked at him with resentment. Some with relief. Some no longer had enough strength for either.
A group went inland and did not return.
Near evening, one survivor staggered back alone, white-faced and shaking so badly he could barely speak. He told of a beautiful woman in a shining house, of singing, of food and wine, of men changed into swine while their minds remained trapped inside the horror of their own bodies. His words tumbled over one another until he collapsed in the sand.
Odysseus rose with his sword already in his hand.
Jesus rose too.
“No,” Odysseus said sharply. “This one I understand. A deceiver has taken my men. I will bring them back or die.”
Jesus looked toward the darkening trees. “Yes. But not as the same man who entered the cave.”
Odysseus breathed hard, the sword trembling slightly in his grip. “What does that mean?”
“It means you must go in truth. Not hungry for glory. Not hiding fear beneath command. Not despising the men for being tempted. Not trusting your cleverness as if it were your god.”
The forest waited, full of perfume and shadow.
Odysseus looked at the exhausted crew, at the single remaining ship, at the sea that had carried him away from home again and again. Then he looked at Jesus, and the words came from him with difficulty, as if pride had to be pulled out by the root.
“Then walk with me.”
Jesus’s face held no surprise. “I have been walking with you.”
Together they turned from the shore and entered the trees, toward the house where appetite wore beauty, where men had been made beasts, and where Odysseus would have to learn whether he wanted his men restored only for the voyage, or whether he was willing to be restored with them.
Chapter Five
Ithaca did not receive Odysseus with trumpets. It received him with wet stones, low mist, and the smell of fields he knew so deeply that his body remembered before his mind trusted it. He knelt when his feet touched the shore, not because a king was supposed to honor his land, but because the ground beneath him was real and he was afraid that if he stood too quickly it might vanish like every other mercy the sea had shown him and taken back.
Jesus stood beside him and looked toward the hills where smoke rose from houses hidden by olive trees. He did not speak at once. That silence let the homecoming enter Odysseus without being turned into instruction. The island was smaller than the war had made him imagine and greater than any victory song had ever been. Somewhere beyond those slopes was the house where Penelope had waited, where Telemachus had grown, where servants had endured insult, where strangers now ate another man’s bread and called patience weakness.
Odysseus touched the soil. “I thought coming home would end the journey.”
Jesus looked at him with kindness. “Home is where the truth you learned on the road must become love.”
They went first as poor travelers, clothed in humility rather than recognition. Odysseus hated the rags more than he expected. It was not the rough cloth that troubled him, but the way men looked through him when they thought he had nothing to offer. At the old swineherd’s shelter, he heard of the suitors drinking in his hall, mocking his son, pressing his wife, wasting the household, and training themselves to believe that delayed judgment meant no judgment would come. The servant who told it wept with anger, then apologized for weeping.
Jesus touched the man’s shoulder. “Faithfulness in a ruined house is not small.”
When Telemachus came to the shelter, tall, wary, and carrying the strain of a father’s absence in his face, Odysseus could barely breathe. The boy he had left behind was a man now, but not without damage. He moved like someone who had learned to measure every room for danger. His eyes held hope carefully, as if hope had been embarrassed too many times.
Odysseus wanted to claim him at once, to explain, to embrace, to command the years to close. Jesus stepped near, not stopping him with a hand, but with the gentleness of His presence. Odysseus remembered the underworld, the mast, the island, the shore where he had wept because truth might cost him what lies could not keep.
So when he revealed himself, he did not begin with glory.
“My son,” he said, voice breaking despite all his effort. “I am your father, and I have come home late. I have crossed much, but none of it gives back what my absence took from you.”
Telemachus stared as if struck between longing and anger. “Men told stories of you my whole life.”
Odysseus nodded. “Stories are poor fathers.”
The young man’s face twisted. For one moment he looked ready to turn away, and Odysseus accepted that he had no right to stop him. Then Telemachus crossed the space between them and seized him, not gently, not neatly, but with the desperate strength of a son who had spent years needing the very man he resented. Odysseus held him and did not tell him not to cry. He cried too. Jesus stood near the doorway and looked out at the fields, giving them privacy without leaving them alone.
That night, father and son spoke of the house. Telemachus wanted justice. Odysseus wanted it too, and the old fire in him was not dead. It rose when he heard how the suitors laughed at Penelope’s grief, how they threatened servants, how they plotted against the son whose inheritance they consumed. But Jesus sat with them beside the low fire and would not let revenge dress itself as righteousness without being questioned.
“Evil must be confronted,” Jesus said. “But if you enter your house only to spill the fury the sea could not drown, the suitors will still have shaped the home you claim to restore.”
Telemachus looked at Him. “Should they be forgiven without answering for what they have done?”
“No,” Jesus said. “Forgiveness does not make truth unnecessary. Mercy does not hand the vulnerable back to wolves. But judgment that forgets the image of God in the guilty becomes another hunger.”
Odysseus stared into the fire. He understood hunger now. He had seen it in flowers, giants, enchantment, songs, storms, sacred cattle, and his own name shouted across water. The suitors were not his only danger. The greater danger was that he would enter his own hall and become again the man who believed power made him clean.
They went to the palace the next day. Odysseus entered as a beggar with Jesus walking beside him, a quiet stranger whom arrogant men dismissed because holiness did not flatter their importance. The hall smelled of roasted meat, spilled wine, sweat, and waste. Men lounged where they had not labored, laughed beneath beams they had not raised, and spoke of Penelope as if her sorrow were a prize to divide.
A cup struck Odysseus on the shoulder before he had crossed half the room. Laughter followed. The pain was small compared with what he had survived, but the insult reached deeper because it happened under his own roof. His hand moved once toward the hidden weapon beneath his rags.
Jesus looked at him.
Odysseus let the hand fall.
Penelope entered later, veiled in dignity that grief had not destroyed. Odysseus knew her instantly and nearly lost the strength to remain hidden. She was older, and so was he. That truth pierced him with tenderness. Waiting had written itself into her face, but it had not emptied her. She carried sorrow like a lamp that refused to go out.
She looked at the poor traveler and asked what news he carried. Odysseus answered carefully, giving hope without theft, truth without display. Jesus watched Penelope with deep compassion, and when she passed near Him, she paused as if some quiet in Him had reminded her that God had seen every night she endured unseen by men.
The test came with the bow. The suitors failed one by one, their boasting turning sour under the weight they could not bend. Telemachus stood ready. The faithful servants secured the doors. Odysseus took the bow in his hands and felt the whole journey gather there: Troy, the lotus shore, the cave, the opened bag, the destroyed fleet, Circe’s hall, the underworld, the Sirens, the strait, the broken ship, Calypso’s island, and Ithaca under his feet.
Before he strung it, he looked at Jesus.
“Restore the house,” Jesus said quietly. “Do not worship the bow.”
Odysseus strung it. The sound moved through the hall like a door closing on a long lie. The arrow flew cleanly through the axes, and silence fell so hard that even the drunkest men understood something had changed.
Then Odysseus stood upright, and the disguise seemed to fall from him before the cloth did. “I am Odysseus,” he said. “This is my house, but I will not pretend my return makes me innocent of all that absence allowed. You have eaten what was not yours, threatened what you could not honor, and treated grief as weakness. Any man who will lay down his weapon, confess his part, and submit to judgment for restitution may live.”
The offer stunned the room.
Some wavered. A few lowered their eyes. But the loudest laughed because pride would rather die standing on a lie than kneel before truth. They reached for weapons and rushed him.
The fight was terrible, but it was not wild. Odysseus fought with the skill of a man who knew violence too well and the restraint of a man who had finally learned to fear what violence could make of him. Telemachus stood beside him. Loyal servants defended the doors. Jesus moved through the chaos not as a swordsman seeking blood, but as a shield for the helpless, pulling the unarmed from danger, speaking courage to the faithful, and commanding those who dropped their weapons to stay down and live.
When the last armed threat fell, Odysseus raised his hand before the hall could become slaughter. A servant accused of betrayal collapsed at his feet, sobbing. An old singer trembled near a pillar. Men who had mocked him now begged from the floor.
The old Odysseus would have let fury finish what justice began.
The changed man stood breathing hard, sword lowered, grief and anger moving together in him without becoming master. “Those who harmed the innocent will answer,” he said. “Those who were afraid and weak will tell the truth. No one will be cleansed by pretending. No one will be killed to feed my pride.”
Jesus looked at him, and the sorrow in His face held a small light.
The house did not become whole by sunset. Blood had to be washed from stone. The dead had to be named. The guilty had to be judged with care. Servants who had endured fear needed more than orders to feel safe. Telemachus needed time to trust that his father would not vanish into legend again. Penelope needed more than a victory to know whether the man before her had truly returned.
That night she tested him with the bed built around the rooted olive tree. Odysseus answered not with offended pride, but with wounded tenderness. He spoke of the tree, of the room, of the life they had begun before war broke the years open. Then he stopped and looked at her as a man looks at someone he cannot command to heal.
“I know the secret of our bed,” he said softly. “But knowing a thing from the old life does not prove I have returned fit for the new one. I have come home, Penelope. I have also come to ask forgiveness.”
Her face trembled. “For leaving?”
“For leaving, and for thinking survival would be enough to bring back a husband. For letting my name grow larger than my tenderness. For every way my absence made you stand alone.”
Penelope crossed the room slowly. When she touched his face, it was not the touch of a woman receiving a hero. It was the touch of a wife searching for the man beneath the years. He did not rush her. When she finally leaned into him, he held her as if mercy had weight and had chosen his arms for a moment.
Near dawn, after the house had quieted into a weary peace, Jesus walked out beyond the courtyard to a small rise where the sea could be seen between olive branches. Odysseus followed at a distance with Penelope and Telemachus standing in the doorway behind him. The household was not perfect. It was wounded, shaken, and still full of work. But it was no longer ruled by strangers, lies, or the old hunger for a name.
Jesus knelt in quiet prayer as the first light touched Ithaca.
Odysseus watched Him and understood that the journey had never been only from Troy to home. It had been from pride to truth, from control to trust, from survival to repentance, from wrath to mercy, from a man’s own name back to the Father who had seen him in every storm. The sea had not been gentle, but God had been faithful in the waves, in the caves, in the losses, in the corrections, and in the homecoming that asked more of him than victory ever had.
Jesus prayed, and the morning widened over the restored house. No song could hold all that had happened. No king could master all that mercy had done. But a weary man stood at last on his own land, not as a conqueror demanding honor, but as a husband, father, and servant learning how to love what had been entrusted to him.
Your friend, Douglas Vandergraph
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from thirdspacecollective
Welcome to Third Space Collective I’m Paul Hulford, the pastor at the First Congregational Church of Belding, United Church of Christ. As a pastor who has spent time trying to see the world the way Christ does, through the lens of the Kingdom of God I have become disillusioned with modern American Christianity. It’s not always easy. The empires of this world are loud, and they want us to see things their way: through power, control, violence and division. I was born in England, grew up in Bolivia, and now live in the U.S. I have seen how faith can get tangled up in political leanings and co-opted for political power and gain. Yet, I have also see how creating a third space, seeing the world through the way of Christ, can begin to create a beautiful reality. It’s not about picking or choosing sides in the world’s arguments. It is about following Jesus' way into a different kind of life, one that looks like love, justice, and inclusion. That’s why I started Third Space Collective, or 3SC. I wanted to create a place for those of use who want to interact and see the world the way that God does. I don't want us to play by the rules of the empire, but to paint outside of the box. We’re here to explore what is meas to live by the ideals of the Kingdom God, where the last are first, the hungry are fed, the powerful are brought down from their thrones and weapons are beat down into plowshares. Here, we’ll reflect on scripture and I’ll also share sermons and essays about what it looks like to live as citizens of God’s Kingdom in a world that often feels like it is falling into chaos and humanity is being politicized. This isn’t about neutrality. It’s about seeing the world as it truly is, through the eyes of the One who came to set us free. This is for people like me, the disillusioned, the rebels, the dreamers, and the weary. If you’re tired of your faith being used to enlarge the empires of the powerful, if you’re ready to resist the religious status quo, or if you’re just hungry for something real, hopefully this is your place.
Follow us on the Fediverse at @thirdspacecollective@write.as. Read, reflect, and share these ideas with others who are hungry for a faith that looks like Jesus.
Paul Hulford
from What Inspired Me
“Classical music is so long and boring, and it feels so inaccessible...”
If that's you, there's one piece I have to ask you to listen to.
Latvian composer Georgs Pelēcis left us Nevertheless, for Violin, Piano and String Orchestra. At the end of this roughly 28-minute journey waits a kind of trembling emotion that a three-minute pop song could never give you.
If you're going to listen to this piece, I recommend this recording, featuring Gidon Kremer on violin. Born in Latvia, Kremer is a titan who won a string of the toughest competitions of the late Soviet era and is regarded as one of the greatest violinists of our time. He's also the very person the composer entrusted the piece to and who gave its premiere — his performance sounds as if it were simply born to play this music.
Why does classical music get called “boring”? Maybe it's because we're used to pop music, where the chorus takes you straight to the peak — like a flat, effortless drive.
Listening to classical music is a lot like climbing a mountain.
As you trudge step by step up the foothills, the time can feel plain, a little breathless, and short on change. But that very process of walking is full of a quiet pleasure — the beauty of the wildflowers, the comfort of the breeze. And above all, the overwhelming view that opens up once you've fought your way to the summit — the climax — brings a kind of joy that simply can't be compared to a view you were driven straight to in a car.
Nevertheless is a masterpiece that teaches you exactly that pleasure of climbing a mountain.
What makes this piece so compelling is how a clear “drama” unfolds within the music itself.
This is decisively different from a Schubert or Beethoven symphony. Their works open with an orchestra blazing in immediately, laying out a theme almost like a trailer for what's to come, then build toward a climax using the technique of sonata form. Nevertheless uses none of that machinery. Instead, within its roughly 28 minutes, the entire drama — beginning to end — is packed tightly together.
At the opening, violin and piano trade off, spinning out a melancholic, wistful melody. It's as if two people are speaking quietly to each other in the dark, one hesitant word at a time.
As the two keep up their dialogue, the string orchestra — waiting quietly in the background — joins in, gently but surely, like a rippling wave. It's the moment the world begins to widen and take on color.
As the same melody repeats again and again, the music gradually shifts into a major key, filled with light. After three passionate appeals, the piano finally sweeps away all its hesitation and lets a beautiful, affirming sound ring out — its “yes.” It's a moment like something long submerged slowly rising to the surface of the water — and from here, the music surges all at once toward the climax of its drama.
Pelēcis himself has spoken about this piece: “True happiness is happiness shared.” That sentiment is exactly what's carried in the piano's “yes” — the moment it finally opens its heart after three attempts at persuasion.
These days, 15-second short videos and three-minute pop songs that jump straight to the chorus are the norm. We prize efficiency, and we tend to consume only things that deliver results instantly.
But the roughly 28 minutes Pelēcis poured into this piece feels like a quiet, powerful antithesis to that culture of short-form consumption.
It's precisely because it takes its time that this kind of catharsis becomes possible.
If this piece had been compressed into three minutes, that “yes” from the piano wouldn't move us to tears. It's because the music spends over twenty minutes patiently, carefully building tension that the catharsis explodes so powerfully once it's finally released. This kind of emotional gradation, where time itself becomes an ally, is an expression only the format of classical music can offer.
The word “Nevertheless” carries a particular meaning: in spite of everything.
There is so much sadness in life, so many things that don't go the way we want them to. And nevertheless, the world is still this beautiful, still this full of affirmation.
That is exactly the message this piece teaches us.
Before you decide that classical music is boring, try setting aside just 28 minutes to let go of everything else and simply face this piece. Stepping away from efficiency and half-listening, and allowing yourself the luxury of facing the music and nothing else — that's the surest way into this piece. By the time it ends, the way you see the world may have shifted, just a little, toward something gentler.
from What Inspired Me
「クラシック音楽って、曲が長くて退屈だし、なんだか敷居が高い……」
そう思っている人にこそ、どうしても聴いてほしい一曲があります。
ラトビアの現代作曲家、ゲオルグス・ペレーツィス(Georgs Pelēcis)が遺した『Nevertheless(ネヴァーザレス)〜ヴァイオリン、ピアノと弦楽オーケストラのための〜』。約28分というこの長い旅路の果てには、3分のポップスでは決して味わえない、震えるような感動が待っています。
この曲を聴くなら、ぜひヴァイオリンにギドン・クレーメルを迎えたこの録音をお勧めします。ラトビア出身の彼は、旧ソ連時代からの数々の難関コンクールを制し、現代最高のヴァイオリニストの一人と称される巨匠。作曲家自身から直接この曲を託され初演した張本人でもあり、まさにこの曲のために生まれてきたような演奏を聴かせてくれます。
なぜクラシックは「退屈」と言われてしまうのでしょうか。それは、私たちが普段、サビで一気に最高潮を迎えるポップス(=平地のドライブ)に慣れているからかもしれません。
クラシック音楽を聴くことは、「山登り」によく似ています。
ふもとを一歩一歩踏みしめて歩いているときは、地味で、少し息が切れるような、変化の少ない時間に感じることもあります。しかし、その「歩み」のプロセス自体に、草花の美しさや風の心地よさといった、静かな楽しさが満ちています。そして何より、苦労して登り切った頂上(クライマックス)で目の前が開けた瞬間の圧倒的な絶景は、最初から車で一瞬で連れて行かれた景色とは、比べものにならないほどの感動をもたらします。
『Nevertheless』は、まさにそんな山登りの快感を教えてくれる名曲です。
この曲の魅力は、明確な「ドラマ」が音の中で展開される点にあります。
これは、シューベルトやベートーヴェンの交響曲とは決定的に違います。彼らの曲は、いきなりオーケストラが鳴り響く「予告編」とも言うべきテーマの提示から始まり、そこからクライマックスに向けて壮大に展開していくソナタ形式という技法を用いています。しかし『Nevertheless』は、そうした大きな仕掛けを使いません。約28分という時間の中に、始まりから終わりまで、すべてのドラマがぎゅっと詰まっているのです。
冒頭、ヴァイオリンとピアノが交互に、どこか哀愁を帯びた、物憂げなメロディを紡ぎ出します。まるで暗闇の中で二人の人間が、ぽつり、ぽつりと静かに対話をしているかのようです。
二人の対話が続くうちに、背景に控えていた弦楽オーケストラが、さざ波のように優しく、しかし確実に合流してきます。世界が少しずつ広がり、色彩を帯びていく瞬間です。
何度も同じ旋律を繰り返しながら、音楽は徐々に、光に満ちた長調へとシフトしていきます。3度にわたる情熱的な語りかけの果てに、ピアノがそれまでの迷いをすべて吹き飛ばすような、肯定の響き(=「イエス」)を美しく響かせるのです。沈んでいたものが、ゆっくりと水面へ浮かび上がっていくような瞬間——ここから音楽は一気に、ドラマのクライマックスへと動き出します。
作曲家ペレーツィス自身、この曲についてこう語っています。「真の幸福とは、分かち合われた幸福だから」。3度の説得を経て、ようやく心を開いたピアノの「イエス」には、まさにこの思いが込められているのです。
今の時代、15秒のショート動画や、サビから始まる3分のポップスが主流です。タイパ(タイムパフォーマンス)が重視され、私たちは「すぐに結果が出るもの」ばかりを消費しがちです。
しかし、ペレーツィスがこの曲に込めた「28分」という時間は、そうした現代の短尺文化に対する、静かで力強いアンチテーゼ(反論)のように思えます。
時間をかけるからこそ、生まれるカタルシスがある。
もしこの曲が3分に凝縮されていたら、あのピアノの「イエス」の響きに、私たちは涙ぐむほどの感動を覚えないでしょう。20分以上かけて、じわじわと、丁寧に「ためて」きたからこそ、最後に解放されたときのカタルシスが爆発するのです。時間を味方に味わせる感情のグラデーションは、クラシックというフォーマットだからこそ可能な表現です。
『Nevertheless』という言葉には、「それにもかかわらず」という意味があります。
人生には悲しいことや、思い通りにいかないことがたくさんある。「それにもかかわらず(Nevertheless)」、世界はこんなにも美しく、肯定に満ちている。
この曲が教えてくれるのは、まさにそのメッセージです。
「クラシックは退屈」と決めつける前に、ぜひ一度、28分間だけ他のすべてを手放して、この曲だけに向き合う時間を作ってみてください。効率やながら聴きから離れ、ただ音楽とだけ向き合う——そんな贅沢な時間を自分に許すことこそが、この曲を味わう一番の近道です。聴き終えたとき、あなたの世界の見え方が、少しだけ優しく変わっているはずです。
from
SmarterArticles

For four weeks, sixty-seven people sat down with a screen and a question that has come to define the age: is this real? Each was shown a procession of news headlines paired with images, a stream of the genuine and the fabricated mixed together in deliberate confusion. Some of the pictures were authentic. Some were the synthetic offspring of generative models, plausible to the point of menace. And for part of the study, the participants did not face this alone. They had an assistant, a conversational AI willing to weigh in, to reason aloud, to nudge them towards a verdict. With the machine at their side, they grew measurably sharper. They caught more of the fakes. They were, on average, twenty-one per cent more accurate than they had been without help.
Then the researchers took the machine away.
What happened next is the reason the study exists, and the reason it should unsettle anyone who has come to lean on a chatbot to tell the true from the false. When the participants were asked to evaluate fresh headlines on their own, their performance did not merely fail to improve. It fell. By the fourth week, their unassisted accuracy had declined by 15.3 per cent compared with where they had started. The tool that had made them better at the task had, over the same weeks, made them worse at it without the tool. And a striking share of them did not notice. Roughly a quarter reported feeling that they had improved, even as the data recorded the opposite.
The work, conducted by researchers at the MIT Media Lab and presented at CHI 2026, the premier international gathering for human-computer interaction research, carries a title that reads almost like a warning label: “Dialogues with AI Reduce Beliefs in Misinformation but Build No Lasting Discernment Skills.” The team behind it, including Anku Rani, Valdemar Danry, Paul Pu Liang, Andrew Lippman and the senior researcher Pattie Maes, had set out to test a hopeful proposition. If conversing with an AI can durably lower a person's belief in false information, perhaps those same conversations might also teach the person to detect falsehood independently, the way a good tutor leaves a student more capable than they found them. The hope did not survive contact with the evidence.
The design of the study is worth dwelling on, because the architecture of the experiment is what gives the result its force. The researchers did not simply hand participants a verdict-dispensing oracle and measure their satisfaction. They structured the month into phases, taking a baseline measurement of unassisted accuracy at the outset, interleaving sessions of AI-assisted evaluation, and then testing participants again on entirely fresh, previously unseen items without any help. That last detail matters enormously. If the unassisted test had recycled familiar headlines, an apparent improvement might have reflected nothing more than memorisation. By presenting new material, the researchers isolated the thing that actually counts: not whether a participant could recall a particular debunked story, but whether the experience of working alongside the AI had left them better equipped to confront the unknown. It had not. The transfer that defines genuine learning, the carrying of a skill from one instance to the next, simply failed to occur. The machine had functioned as a prosthesis rather than a teacher, and a prosthesis, however effective while it is worn, builds no muscle of its own.
There is a metaphor that the researchers, and almost everyone who has since written about the study, reach for instinctively. It is the satellite navigation system. You have probably lived the small version of it yourself: years of obediently following the turn-by-turn voice, until one day the signal drops in an unfamiliar city and you realise, with a cold little jolt, that you have no idea where you are. You have been to this place a dozen times. You have never once learned the way.
The analogy is more than rhetorical convenience, because the underlying neuroscience is real and unusually well documented. The most celebrated demonstration comes not from a study of GPS users but from a study of the people who represent its precise opposite: the licensed black-cab drivers of London. To earn their badge, these drivers must pass an examination known simply as the Knowledge, a feat of memorisation requiring years of preparation and the internalisation of some twenty-five thousand streets and the tangle of routes between them. In a landmark investigation published in 2000, the cognitive neuroscientist Eleanor Maguire and her colleagues at University College London scanned the brains of these drivers and found that the posterior hippocampus, a region central to spatial memory and navigation, was enlarged relative to that of non-drivers. A later longitudinal study tracked trainees over the years of their preparation and watched the structure grow, but only in those who ultimately passed.
The Knowledge, in other words, leaves a physical signature on the brain that acquires it. The hippocampus responds to demand. And the corollary, the part that should give every habitual user of navigation software pause, is that the relationship runs in both directions. Tissue that is exercised grows; capacity that is delegated does not. Maguire's drivers also paid a price, performing less well on certain other memory tasks, a reminder that the brain is not an infinitely expandable warehouse but an organ of trade-offs. Subsequent research on habitual GPS use has reported associations between heavier reliance on turn-by-turn navigation and poorer performance on spatial-memory measures, with longitudinal work suggesting steeper self-reported decline in navigational ability among the most dependent users. The compass in your hand, used uncritically, becomes the compass you no longer carry inside.
The MIT team's insight was to recognise that misinformation detection might be a faculty of exactly this kind: a skill that strengthens with practice and atrophies with delegation. When you puzzle over whether a headline is genuine, you are exercising something. You are checking the source against memory, interrogating the image for the tell-tale incoherence of a synthetic render, registering the emotional manipulation in the phrasing, recalling whether the claimed event squares with everything else you know. Hand that labour to a machine and the immediate problem is solved. But the faculty goes unexercised. And faculties that go unexercised, as the hippocampus of the lapsed navigator demonstrates, do not stand still. They quietly recede, and the recession is all the more insidious for being silent, because nothing about the smooth experience of asking and receiving an answer signals that anything is being lost at all.
If the finding feels novel, the anxiety it provokes is anything but. Plato has Socrates fret, in the Phaedrus, that the invention of writing would implant forgetfulness in the souls of those who learned it, because they would cease to exercise their memory and trust instead to external marks. It is fashionable to cite this episode as proof that fears about cognitive offloading are perennial and therefore overblown. That reading is too glib. Socrates was not simply wrong; he was describing, with reasonable accuracy, a genuine trade-off. Literate cultures did substitute external storage for prodigious feats of oral memory. We gained more than we lost, but we did lose something, and pretending otherwise misses the actual lesson, which is that every cognitive tool reshapes the cognition that uses it. The pertinent question is never whether a tool changes us, because all of them do. It is whether the particular change it produces is one we would choose with our eyes open.
The modern empirical literature on this reshaping is substantial. In 2011, the psychologists Betsy Sparrow, Jenny Liu and Daniel Wegner published a paper in Science describing what swiftly became known as the Google effect. Across four experiments, they found that when people expected to be able to look information up again later, they remembered the information itself less well, but remembered better where to find it. The internet, the authors argued, had become a form of transactive memory, an external partner to which we offload the burden of remembering, holding onto the index rather than the entry. We had begun to remember our way to knowledge rather than the knowledge itself. The phenomenon was soon given a popular name, digital amnesia, and it captured something real about the texture of modern thought: the strange confidence of knowing that an answer is retrievable, paired with the quiet erosion of actually holding it.
There is the calculator, too, the example invoked so often it has become a cliché of the genre, and a contested one. The evidence on calculators is genuinely mixed, which is part of why the comparison is instructive rather than damning: a tool that handles arithmetic can free a learner to grapple with higher-order mathematical reasoning, or it can hollow out the numerical intuition on which that reasoning depends, and which outcome prevails turns largely on how the tool is folded into the learning. The instrument is not destiny. The pedagogy around it is. A calculator introduced after a child has internalised the structure of multiplication is an accelerant; the same device introduced before that structure exists can prevent it from ever forming. The lesson generalises with uncomfortable directness to AI, and it is precisely the lesson the MIT study sharpens.
And there is aviation, the field that has stared longest and hardest into the question of what happens when humans cede a complex skill to an automated system. Decades of cockpit automation have delivered enormous safety gains, but they have also produced a documented phenomenon that pilots and regulators call skill fade: the erosion of manual flying ability among aviators who spend the overwhelming majority of their hours monitoring systems rather than hand-flying aircraft. Investigations by bodies including the United States Federal Aviation Administration have repeatedly flagged automation complacency and the degradation of basic stick-and-rudder competence as safety concerns, the danger crystallising in those rare, terrible moments when the automation disengages and a crew must suddenly fly an aeroplane whose feel they have half-forgotten. The aviation world's response is telling, and we will return to it, because it represents one of the few large-scale institutional attempts to deliberately preserve a skill that automation tends to corrode.
What unites the cab driver, the Google user and the airline pilot is a single, under-examined idea: that the most consequential effect of a powerful tool may not be anything it does to the world, but what it does to the person wielding it. This is the argument advanced in a paper published in May 2026 by Ilias Chalkidis and Anders Søgaard, bluntly titled “Brainrot: Deskilling and Addiction are Overlooked AI Risks” and accepted to FAccT 2026, the major conference on fairness, accountability and transparency in computing.
Their contention is structural. The field of AI safety, they observe, has organised itself around a fairly stable taxonomy of harms: discrimination and hate speech, violent or illegal content, information hazards, and the misuse of models by malicious actors for cyberattacks or worse. These are real and serious. But they share a feature, which is that they concern what AI systems output into the world. What the literature has largely neglected, Chalkidis and Søgaard argue, is what sustained reliance on these systems does to their users: the deskilling that follows from chronic cognitive offloading, the slow atrophy of critical thinking, and the dependency and attachment that can shade into something like addiction. These risks are, in their framing, hiding in plain sight, prominent in public conversation yet largely absent from the safety and alignment research that is supposed to anticipate harm. The authors go further, quantifying the discrepancy between how much attention the research community devotes to output harms and how little it devotes to user harms, and arguing that the gap is not an accident but a reflection of where the field's incentives and instruments happen to point.
The distinction they draw is the one that makes the MIT findings so quietly alarming. The danger most people associate with AI and misinformation is that the machines will manufacture convincing fakes faster than we can debunk them, flooding the information environment with synthetic plausibility. That danger is genuine. But it is a supply-side problem, a question of what is poured into the public sphere. Deskilling is a demand-side problem, a question of what happens to the human capacity to process whatever is poured in. The two interact in the worst possible way. The very tool offered as the antidote to the flood of fakes may, through habitual use, be eroding the cognitive immune system that the flood demands. We are, on this account, being handed a crutch precisely as the ground beneath us turns to ice. Worse, the erosion and the flood are likely to accelerate together, because the same advances in generative modelling that make synthetic content more convincing also make the assistant more fluent and more trusted, deepening the reliance at the exact moment the threat intensifies.
This is not the only recent study to point in the direction. In early 2025, researchers at Microsoft Research and Carnegie Mellon University surveyed hundreds of knowledge workers about their use of generative AI and reported that higher confidence in the AI was associated with less critical thinking, while higher confidence in one's own abilities was associated with more. The same survey found that AI-assisted workers tended to produce a less diverse range of outputs for a given task, a possible signature of homogenised, under-interrogated thinking. Around the same period, the researcher Michael Gerlich published a study in the journal Societies, drawing on data from hundreds of participants, that found a significant negative correlation between frequent AI use and critical-thinking scores, mediated by cognitive offloading and most pronounced among the youngest respondents. None of these studies is the last word. Each has the familiar limitations of survey-based and correlational work, and self-reported measures of one's own thinking are notoriously unreliable. But they are beginning to rhyme, and when independent groups using different methods and different populations converge on the same uncomfortable melody, the prudent response is to listen rather than to wait for a single decisive experiment that may never come.
The demographic dimension is where the abstract risk acquires a sharp social edge. According to data gathered by the Pew Research Centre and cited in the MIT study, roughly one in five American teenagers now turns to AI chatbots for news, and around one in five adults under fifty does so at least some of the time. Pew's broader survey work supports the surrounding picture: about two-thirds of US teenagers aged thirteen to seventeen report using AI chatbots at all, with close to three in ten using them daily, and adults under fifty are roughly twice as likely as their elders to report using a tool such as ChatGPT.
Read those figures alongside Gerlich's finding that the young rely most heavily on AI and score lowest on critical thinking, and a troubling alignment comes into focus. The population most inclined to outsource the work of telling true from false to a machine is, on the available evidence, also the population whose independent capacity to do that work is most at risk of going undeveloped or eroding. This is not a story about people losing a mature skill they once possessed. For many of the youngest users, it may be a story about a skill that never gets built at all, because the scaffolding is removed before anything load-bearing has formed behind it. The lapsed navigator at least once knew the route. The teenager who has only ever asked the chatbot whether a story is true may never lay down the cognitive map in the first place. There is a developmental window in which the habits of scepticism, source evaluation and patient verification are most readily acquired, and a tool that pre-empts those habits during that window may foreclose them in a way that is far harder to reverse than the deskilling of an adult who learned them long ago.
It would be easy, and lazy, to slide from here into a familiar lament about distracted youth. That is not the argument, and the data do not license it. The teenagers turning to chatbots for news are, in many respects, behaving rationally. The information environment they have inherited is genuinely treacherous, thick with manipulated images and algorithmically amplified falsehood, and a tool that promises to cut through it is a reasonable thing to reach for. The problem is not their judgement in reaching for it. The problem is the design of the thing they reach for, and what that design does to them over time. Which raises the question the MIT researchers were ultimately driving at, and the one on which the entire matter turns. Is the deskilling inevitable, a fixed cost of any AI assistance? Or is it an artefact of how these tools happen to be built, and therefore something a different design might avoid?
The MIT team did not stop at diagnosis. Embedded in their analysis is a distinction that may prove to be the most useful thing to come out of the entire study. There are, broadly, two ways an AI can help a person evaluate a claim. It can tell, or it can ask.
A telling system delivers verdicts. You show it a headline, it informs you that the headline is false and perhaps explains why, and you move on. It is efficient, satisfying, and, on the evidence, corrosive, because it positions the human as a passive recipient of conclusions rather than an active producer of them. As Valdemar Danry, one of the study's authors, put it, AI systems that tell by providing direct answers are more likely to foster reliance, whereas those that ask, through something like Socratic questioning, are better at engaging a person to actually learn. An asking system withholds the verdict. It prompts you to consider where the image might have come from, whether the source is one you recognise, what about the framing is designed to provoke. It hands the cognitive labour back to you, while structuring that labour so you are more likely to perform it well. The asking system is, in a precise sense, less helpful in the moment and more helpful over a lifetime, and the tension between those two timescales is the whole game.
It is worth pausing on a particular detail the researchers reported, because it sharpens the stakes. They identified a subset of participants, around a fifth of the sample, who behaved as what might be called dependency developers, passively accepting the AI's guidance with little independent scrutiny. And it was precisely the gap between felt and actual competence, the quarter of participants who believed they had improved while measurably declining, that should worry us most. A person who knows they have grown dependent can choose to wean themselves. A person who has grown dependent while believing they have grown skilled has no reason to, and every incentive to deepen the reliance. Misplaced confidence is the mechanism by which a temporary aid hardens into a permanent dependency, and it is exactly the mechanism a telling interface cultivates, because nothing about receiving correct answers teaches you to doubt your own unaided judgement.
This is the difference between substituting for a skill and scaffolding it, and the word scaffolding is doing precise work here. In developmental psychology, scaffolding refers to the temporary support a more capable partner provides to a learner, support that is calibrated to the learner's current level and, crucially, gradually withdrawn as competence grows. The point of a scaffold is that it comes down. A scaffold that becomes permanent is no longer a scaffold; it is a crutch, or a cage. The conventional misinformation chatbot, the one that simply renders verdicts, is a crutch by design. It offers no path towards its own obsolescence. The asking system, by contrast, is built to make itself unnecessary, to leave the user more capable than it found them, exactly as Maguire's Knowledge left its drivers with enlarged hippocampi rather than enlarged dependence on a map.
The design vocabulary for this already exists, and it has an appealingly counter-intuitive name: productive friction. The dominant instinct in technology design is to remove friction, to make every interaction as smooth and effortless as possible, and for most purposes that instinct is sound. But learning is not frictionless, and the very smoothness that makes a tool pleasant to use can be what prevents it from teaching. Productive friction is the deliberate reintroduction of effort at the points where effort produces growth: a prompt that asks you to commit to a judgement before the AI reveals its own, a system that requires you to articulate your reasoning, an interface that surfaces the verification heuristics a journalist or fact-checker would apply and invites you to apply them yourself. A growing strand of human-computer interaction research, including recent work on AI provocations designed to restore critical thinking to AI-assisted knowledge work, has begun to demonstrate that such friction can measurably raise the quality of engagement without destroying the tool's usefulness. The trick is that the friction must be productive, targeted at the moments where struggle builds capacity rather than merely irritating the user, and calibrating it is a genuine design problem rather than a slogan.
The aviation industry, having confronted skill fade decades before the rest of us, offers a working model of what taking deskilling seriously looks like in practice. The response there was not to abandon automation, which would be absurd given its safety record, nor to pretend the erosion of manual skill was not happening. It was to mandate the deliberate, scheduled exercise of the very skills the automation tends to atrophy. Pilots are required to hand-fly, to practise in simulators the failure modes in which the automation drops out and human competence must take over, to maintain the faculty against the day it is needed. The principle is that a skill worth preserving in a partly automated system must be actively maintained, because the system itself will not maintain it. Left to its own logic, the automation will quietly let the skill decay.
Translate that principle to the epistemic domain and the outlines of a response begin to appear. It implies that media-literacy education cannot treat AI assistance as a neutral convenience to be bolted onto existing curricula, but must reckon with the possibility that the tools students use to check facts are simultaneously shaping, and possibly degrading, the faculties the curriculum is meant to build. Pattie Maes, the senior MIT researcher, drew exactly this conclusion, stressing the importance of raising awareness in schools and academic communities about the shortcomings of AI as a learning tool. It implies that the design of consumer AI products is not an ethically neutral matter of feature optimisation, because the choice between a telling interface and an asking one is, in aggregate and over years, a choice about the cognitive capacities of a population. And it implies, perhaps most provocatively, that we may need the epistemic equivalent of mandatory hand-flying: structured, regular practice at unassisted discernment, built into education and perhaps into the tools themselves, on the understanding that the capacity will wither if it is never exercised.
The analogy is imperfect, of course, and the imperfection is instructive. Aviation could mandate hand-flying because it is a regulated profession with licensing bodies, recurrent training requirements and a safety culture forged by catastrophe. There is no equivalent authority over the billions of casual interactions between ordinary people and consumer chatbots, no licensing regime for citizens evaluating the news. The maintenance of epistemic skill cannot simply be legislated into the daily habits of a population the way it can be written into a pilot's logbook. That makes the design layer more important, not less. If we cannot mandate the practice from outside, the practice must be engineered into the tools themselves, so that the path of least resistance is also a path that keeps the underlying faculty alive. Chalkidis and Søgaard gesture at a complementary lever, suggesting that public information campaigns and regulation might mitigate deskilling much as they have been mobilised against other public-health risks, treating cognitive atrophy as a hazard to be managed rather than an inevitability to be absorbed.
Intellectual honesty requires holding all of this at the right distance. The MIT study tracked sixty-seven people over four weeks. That is a serious, well-constructed piece of work, but it is not the foundation for sweeping civilisational pronouncement. Sixty-seven is a modest sample. Four weeks is a short window against which to project lifelong cognitive change. Laboratory and online study conditions are not the messy reality of how people actually consume news, and the artificiality of repeatedly classifying headline-image pairs may exaggerate or distort effects that would look different in the wild. The measured decline, real and statistically significant within the study, is a finding to be replicated and probed, not a law of nature to be enshrined. The authors themselves frame it as evidence that demands further investigation, not as a verdict already delivered.
There are genuine counterarguments, too, and they deserve more than a perfunctory nod. The optimistic case is that AI assistance frees human cognition from drudgery to operate at a higher level, much as literacy freed us from the tyranny of oral memorisation and arithmetic tools can free a mathematician for genuine reasoning. Perhaps a generation that offloads first-order fact-checking to machines will redirect its cognitive energy towards more sophisticated forms of judgement, towards synthesis and meaning-making and the evaluation of the machines themselves. Perhaps. But that hopeful trajectory is precisely the one the MIT data fail to support. The participants did not ascend to some higher plane of discernment; they got worse at the task and, in many cases, did not realise it. The mismatch between their declining accuracy and their rising confidence is the detail that should linger, because a population that is simultaneously less able to detect falsehood and more sure of its abilities is not a population that has traded up. It is a population that has been quietly hollowed while believing itself enriched.
What ties the strands together is the recognition that we are conducting an unplanned experiment on the epistemic capacity of the species, and we are running it backwards, deploying the tools at planetary scale first and asking what they do to us afterwards. The MIT study is one of the early, careful attempts to ask the question with rigour, and its provisional answer is that the relationship between AI assistance and human discernment is not neutral. The default design of these systems, the telling design that simply hands down verdicts, appears to trade long-term capacity for short-term accuracy, and to do so invisibly, beneath the user's own awareness. That is the worst kind of trade, because it offers no signal that a trade is being made at all.
But the same study, read carefully, contains the seed of a more hopeful possibility. The deskilling is not a fixed cost of intelligence in a box. It is, on the evidence, a consequence of a particular and dominant design choice, the choice to substitute rather than to scaffold, to tell rather than to ask, to remove friction rather than to place it where it does some good. A different choice is available. We know what scaffolded discernment looks like, in the Socratic tutor who refuses to give the answer, in the aviation regime that mandates hand-flying, in the developmental scaffold engineered to come down. We have the design vocabulary, the productive friction and the asking interface and the heuristic made visible and practised. What we have lacked, so far, is the will to prefer the tool that strengthens us over the tool that merely serves us, and an industry whose incentives reward engagement and ease rather than the slow, unglamorous cultivation of an independent mind.
The compass in your hand will always be more convenient than the one you must build inside yourself. That has been true of every tool that ever offered to think on our behalf, from the written word to the calculator to the satellite overhead. The question the fading compass poses is not whether to use the tool. It is whether we will insist on tools that, like the best teachers and the hardest examinations, leave us more capable than they found us, or settle for tools that leave us merely more dependent, lost in a familiar city, certain we know the way.

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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