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from
Unattributed
Frank Sinatra circa 1958
The other day I found a clip of a VTuber talking about expanding beyond their typical music taste. In this case they had heard a small snippet of a song by Frank Sinatra somewhere, and decided to check it out. The song? It's Nice To Go Trav'ling from the Come Fly With Album. The clip took a turn that I found a bit surprising.
The VTuber stated that they really liked the song… It was basically a silly piece of music, one they even had a thought of covering. Until they heard one verse, a verse that changed everything. Why? Well, as they stated, Frank said a slur word. And he didn't just say it once, he said it three times!
Frank Sinatra uttering a slur? In a song? A song on a record from a major recording label? A recording from 1958? I couldn't believe what I was hearing, and I had to understand what has going on. So I looked up the song lyrics, and what I encountered was quite a bit more complicated than I would have initially thought.
The lyric in question is:
It's quite the life to play gypsy And roam as gypsies will roam It's quite the life to play gypsy But your heart starts singin' when your homeward wingin' 'cross the foam
This wasn't my first time encountering the interpretation of this term for the Romani people as a slur. But, as with many situations there is more to this than one might expect, or at least I expected from the context.
If you search the web for the phrase “is [redacted] word a slur”, you will likely find articles like Why It’s Time to Stop Saying “Gypsy”, which claim:
To answer your question about this frequently Googled term, the short answer is yes, absolutely. The word is as a racial slur against the Roma people, the PC term for gypsy.
Reading this article, I was immediately put on alert. Anytime someone decides to take an absolute position, it seems more likely they will have reached a conclusion that is, at best, dismissive of part of the information that is available.
This was where I took a look at the word from an etymological standpoint. Why? Because our language has history. Contextual use of language based in history is frequently ignored when people take a stand, especially an absolute stand.
Enter Grammarphobia with the article: Is ‘Gypsy’ a slur?. This article very clearly documents that the origins of the word were used in a pejorative manner:
The earliest form of the word in English, which the Oxford English Dictionary dates to the 1530s, was “Gipcyan,” an abbreviated version of “Egyptian.” […] And many early appearances of “Gypsy” in English were highly pejorative because, as OED citations show, these itinerant foreigners were often viewed with contempt and mistrust, suspected of crimes, and driven away.
But, then there are some turns and twists in the story:
In later use, Oxford adds, “gypsy” (by this time lowercased) was used playfully rather than contemptuously for a woman, “and applied esp. to a brunette.” All those uses have died out.
But since then “gypsy” (also spelled “gipsy”) has acquired several more meanings, none of them pejorative. Most date from around the mid-20th century, [...]
And it's these meanings that many of us are more familiar, and are likely the origin of the verse in the Frank Sinatra song:
1) Someone who’s free-spirited or doesn’t live in one place for long.
2) A person with a career or way of life that’s itinerant or unconventional, especially a part-time or temporary college faculty member or a performer in the chorus line of a theatrical production.
So, there it is, the likely reason the song contains (the Sammy Cahn penned) lyric that is interpreted as containing slurs. These definitions are the likely reason Frank Sinatra sang them: they were understood as meaning carefree and free-spirited.
I think it's safe to say the conclusion that Grammarphobia states, was likely the prevailing thought in the 1950s-1960s:
Our conclusions are that that “Gypsy” (with a capital “G”) is offensive to some people, and should be used with caution if at all. It should be avoided entirely if any ethnic connection is implied; instead, the words “Roma” or “Romani” should be used. Meanwhile, the non-ethnic uses of “gypsy” (with a lowercase “g”) should not be condemned.
So, if I were to take Grammarphobia's conclusion that should be the end of the discussion, right? Not exactly, there was still another piece of context to consider. And, it's the context that the VTuber was most likely having the strongest reaction to when they condemned Frank for using a slur.
The VTuber in question is British, and their understanding of the Romani people is likely very different from the majority of people in North America. We have long prided ourselves on being open and welcoming to immigrants and itinerant peoples (despite what our current government would have you believe).
This is not to say that we are in any way perfect. There are plenty of examples of distressing things that have happened to immigrants in this country (no example is louder than the imprisonment of Japanese Americans during World War II). There is no debate on this topic. However, on the whole, we have a better track record compared to many countries.
The Romani in Europe, however, have had to endure what appears to have been a ceaseless stream of racism, and distrust. One of the worst cases was the Romani Holocaust (aka Porajmos) by Germany in World War II. But, there are systemic biases and racism that remain throughout Europe to this day.
While there are efforts underway to try to establish the Romani in Europe, there is a very long path ahead for tensions to be reduced. I would likely say that it is going to take several more generations.
Which is where this VTuber comes back in to the picture. They are part of a generation that is being more sensitive to these issues. And for that they are to be applauded. Seeing that this particular song would likely be seen as being incredibly insensitive to the Romani, they are right to take a pass on it.
Although, maybe there's a way to change the verse to remove the stigma? Perhaps this would work?
It's quite the life to play carefree And roam as nomads will roam It's quite the life to be at ease But your heart starts singin' when your homeward wingin' 'cross the foam
Category: #Essay Tags: #music, #vtuber, #history, #romani, #sinatra,
from
The happy place
When I was a kid, my neighbour and I found a goat carcass in the forest.
It’d been picked clean revealing the white skull which we brought back home to my grandmother
We wanted to show it to her
Apparently it was one of her dead goats she’d pulled into the forest herself,
And we’d pulled it back, (partially)
Probably it couldn’t be buried properly in the frozen grounds, and there was no room in the freezer
She really loved her goats.
I didn’t think about it being one of her goats, it was just a skull with horns and teeth
I don’t remember how she reacted when she saw it or why we did it, but I remember the pungent stench of death on my mittens
They threw them away
from
EpicMind

Freundinnen & Freunde der Weisheit! Diese Woche etwas verspätet, die Hitze fordert ihren Tribut. Diese Woche befassen wir uns mit unserer Persönlichkeit und wie stark wir sie formen können.
Viele Menschen wünschen sich, gelassener, gewissenhafter oder kontaktfreudiger zu sein. Die psychologische Forschung zeigt: Unsere Persönlichkeit ist formbar – aber nur bis zu einem gewissen Grad. Zwar bestimmen genetische Anlagen zu einem grossen Teil, wie wir ticken. Doch auch unser Umfeld, unsere Erfahrungen und bewusste Entscheidungen prägen mit, wer wir sind – und wer wir werden können.
Psychologinnen und Psychologen unterscheiden dabei fünf zentrale Persönlichkeitsmerkmale: emotionale Stabilität, Extraversion, Offenheit, Gewissenhaftigkeit und soziale Verträglichkeit. Diese „Big Five“ sind keine festen Kategorien, sondern Kontinua – man kann also durchaus an einer Eigenschaft arbeiten, ohne sich grundlegend zu verändern. Studien belegen, dass gezielte Übungen wie Tagespläne, kleine Mutproben oder sogenannte Wenn-Dann-Pläne (z. B. „Wenn ich auf der Party allein bin, spreche ich jemanden an“) dabei helfen können, gewünschte Eigenschaften zu stärken. Voraussetzung ist jedoch: Die Veränderung muss aus einem inneren Antrieb heraus erfolgen – nicht aus gesellschaftlichem Druck.
Besonders gut lassen sich Eigenschaften wie Extraversion oder Gewissenhaftigkeit beeinflussen. Andere wie Offenheit oder Verträglichkeit sind tiefer verankert – oft durch kulturelle oder familiäre Prägungen – und lassen sich nur schwer und meist nur mit Unterstützung verändern. Entscheidend ist dabei weniger der Wunsch nach einem Idealbild als vielmehr die Frage: Was tut mir gut? In welchen Situationen möchte ich mich anders verhalten – und warum?
Letztlich geht es nicht darum, sich neu zu erfinden, sondern sich besser kennenzulernen. Persönlichkeit verändert sich nicht über Nacht, sondern schrittweise – ähnlich wie ein Muskel, der durch Training wächst. Und sie verändert sich nachhaltiger, wenn Entwicklung und Selbstakzeptanz Hand in Hand gehen. Wer sich unter permanentem Optimierungsdruck verbiegt, läuft Gefahr, sich selbst zu verlieren. Veränderung braucht deshalb mehr als Methoden – sie braucht Mass und Sinn.
„Alle Unruhe im Menschen entspringt aus der Phantasie.“ – Franz Grillparzer (1791–1872)
Meetings sind oft Zeitfresser. Setze klare Agenden, halte sie so kurz wie möglich und stelle sicher, dass am Ende jeder weiss, was zu tun ist.
Wer kennt das nicht: Es ist drei Uhr morgens, draussen ist alles still – nur im eigenen Kopf herrscht Hochbetrieb. Gedanken kreisen, Aufgabenlisten wachsen, verpasste Chancen und ungeklärte Fragen drängen sich auf. An Schlaf ist kaum noch zu denken. Solche Nächte sind keine Seltenheit – sie gehören für viele Menschen zum Alltag. Doch muss man diesem inneren Film wirklich tatenlos zusehen?
Vielen Dank, dass Du Dir die Zeit genommen hast, diesen Newsletter zu lesen. Ich hoffe, die Inhalte konnten Dich inspirieren und Dir wertvolle Impulse für Dein (digitales) Leben geben. Bleib neugierig und hinterfrage, was Dir begegnet!
EpicMind – Weisheiten für das digitale Leben „EpicMind“ (kurz für „Epicurean Mindset“) ist mein Blog und Newsletter, der sich den Themen Lernen, Produktivität, Selbstmanagement und Technologie widmet – alles gewürzt mit einer Prise Philosophie.
Disclaimer Teile dieses Texts wurden mit Deepl Write (Korrektorat und Lektorat) überarbeitet. Für die Recherche in den erwähnten Werken/Quellen und in meinen Notizen wurde NotebookLM von Google verwendet. Das Artikel-Bild wurde mit ChatGPT erstellt und anschliessend nachbearbeitet.
Topic #Newsletter
from An Open Letter
My phone battery is getting very dangerously low and so I’m going to this quickly say this out loud. I hosted another game night tonight and even though the turnout wasn’t huge, we had 10 people and so we were able to play a couple games. I also asked people to bring snacks and I felt like most of the people were very grateful to be there to be invited, and I didn’t feel like I was just an organizer that doesn’t get to participate. Because of that I’m very grateful. I also got to play a lot of the games because a friend offered to host them as a storyteller and that made it a lot more fun for me.
Anonymous
I used to write. I used to read without a schedule and a goal. I used to look younger. I used to not think about aging except as a means for opportunity and change. I used to go to concerts alone and freely. I used to watch movies, I mean, films. I used to kiss boys on streets outside of noisy bars. I used to drink, I mean really drink. I used to be sad all the time. I used to have short hair. I used to wax my bush. I used to wear red lipstick every day. I used to have jean shorts. I used to care more. I used to care less.
from Douglas Vandergraph

Chapter 1: When the Water Stops Looking Like Water
There are nights when your mind will not settle down, even after the house is quiet and the day is technically over. You turn off the light, but the worry does not turn off with it. The room is dark, the phone is facedown, and still your thoughts keep walking around inside you like they are searching for a door. Maybe it is money. Maybe it is your family. Maybe it is your health. Maybe it is a decision you made and cannot undo. Maybe it is a future you cannot see clearly, and every possible version of tomorrow feels like another wave coming toward you. That is why the Jesus walked on water video matters so much to this part of the Christian encouragement library, because this story is not only about a miracle on the Sea of Galilee. It is about what happens inside a person when the place they were supposed to cross becomes the thing they are afraid might swallow them.
I have thought about that boat many times, not as a religious image on a stained-glass window, but as something ordinary people understand. A boat is supposed to help you get across. It is supposed to be the safe thing between you and the deep. It is supposed to hold when the water moves. But the disciples found themselves in a night where the boat was not enough to make them feel safe, and that is where this story meets real life. Sometimes the job that was supposed to support you becomes the place where fear grows. Sometimes the relationship that once felt steady becomes confusing. Sometimes the routine that kept you moving starts to feel thin. Sometimes you are doing what you were supposed to do, and the waves still rise. That is why this article belongs beside a quiet companion reflection on faith when the storm keeps pushing back, because walking with Jesus has never meant pretending the wind is not real.
The story begins with obedience, and that is important. Jesus made the disciples get into the boat and go ahead of Him to the other side while He dismissed the crowd and went up on the mountain by Himself to pray. They were not running away from Jesus. They were not rebelling. They were not choosing the wrong road. They were doing what He told them to do, and still they ended up straining against the wind in the middle of the night. That detail matters because many people quietly believe trouble is always proof that they must have missed God. They think, “If I were really in His will, this would be easier. If I were really obeying, the water would be calmer. If Jesus really sent me here, why does this feel so hard?” But sometimes obedience does not place you on a smooth lake. Sometimes obedience places you in a boat where faith has to become more than a sentence you say when life is calm.
Picture a person standing in the kitchen after everyone else has gone to bed. There is a stack of mail on the counter, a half-empty glass beside the sink, and a bill they do not want to open. They love God. They have prayed. They are trying to do what is right. They are not out chasing destruction. They are trying to live with integrity, care for people, show up, work hard, forgive, keep going, and still the pressure keeps moving against them. That is the kind of moment where this story becomes more than something ancient. It becomes a mirror. The disciples were out there because Jesus sent them, and yet the wind was against them. That means being sent by Jesus does not always mean being spared from resistance.
That can be hard to accept, because many of us want faith to work like a guarantee of easy water. We want to believe that if we pray correctly, obey sincerely, give generously, forgive honestly, and keep showing up, then life should at least become more manageable. Not perfect, but manageable. We are not asking for everything to be simple. We are just asking not to feel like we are rowing in the dark while the wind keeps pushing in the wrong direction. But the Bible does not give us a faith that depends on calm conditions. It gives us Jesus in the middle of conditions that would make most people afraid.
The disciples were not pretending. They were fishermen. Some of them knew water. They knew what a difficult crossing felt like. They were not soft men frightened by a small breeze. They were experienced enough to understand danger when it rose around them. That is another place where the story feels honest. Faith is not pretending experienced people never get scared. Faith is not pretending strong people never feel overwhelmed. Faith is not pretending the wind is harmless. Faith begins to deepen when a person can say, “This is real, this is hard, I do not know how this ends, and I am still looking for Jesus.”
There is a kind of fear that comes from not knowing what you are facing. But there is another kind of fear that comes from knowing exactly what you are facing and realizing your strength may not be enough. A parent feels that when a child is hurting and there is no quick answer. A husband or wife feels that when conversations keep breaking down and love feels tired. A worker feels that when the company changes direction and nobody knows what happens next. A caregiver feels it when the medicine schedule, appointments, bills, and emotional exhaustion all stack up in one long week. You do not have to be in a wooden boat on a dark lake to understand what it feels like to be far from shore.
The strange comfort in this story is that Jesus was not absent in the way the disciples may have felt He was absent. He was on the mountain praying. They were on the water struggling. From their point of view, they were alone in the wind. From the larger view, Jesus had not forgotten them. That is one of the hardest parts of faith to hold onto when life feels heavy. Just because you cannot see Him in the moment does not mean He has stopped seeing you. Just because you feel exposed does not mean you have been abandoned. Just because the wind is loud does not mean heaven has gone silent.
Still, it is one thing to say that in daylight and another thing to believe it in the fourth watch of the night. That phrase carries weight. The fourth watch was late. It was the kind of hour when human strength is thin, when the body is tired, when fear gets strange, when thoughts become less steady. Many people know that hour even if they do not call it by that name. It is the hour when you wake up and stare at the ceiling. It is the hour when the worry feels bigger than it did at dinner. It is the hour when your faith is not gone, but it feels quiet and small. It is the hour when the water stops looking like water and starts looking like the thing that might take you under.
Then Jesus comes to them, walking on the sea.
That sentence is easy to pass over because many of us have heard it so many times. Jesus walked on water. We know the phrase. We know the image. We know Peter is about to ask to come out of the boat. But before we rush there, we should sit with the first shock of it. Jesus came to them on top of the very thing that terrified them. He did not remove the sea first. He did not calm the wind before He approached. He did not wait until the disciples had recovered emotionally and then appear in a more comfortable way. He came across the water while the water was still moving.
That is not just a miracle of power. It is a revelation of authority. The thing beneath His feet was the thing over their heads. The waves that made them feel helpless could not rise above Him. The darkness that made them afraid did not hide them from Him. The distance between the mountain and the boat did not keep Him from coming. Jesus did not need a road where people expected a road to be. He made His presence known in the place that looked impossible.
That matters for the person who thinks God can only meet them after life becomes manageable again. We often imagine that Jesus will feel near once the diagnosis is better, once the debt is paid, once the family tension settles, once the anxiety lifts, once the decision is clear, once the storm has passed. But this story shows Him coming before the storm is finished. He comes in the dark. He comes while they are still afraid. He comes when the boat is still being hit. He comes by walking over what they could not control.
The first response of the disciples was not peace. It was fear. They thought He was a ghost. That detail is painfully human. Sometimes Jesus comes toward us in a way we do not recognize at first. Sometimes help does not look like help when fear has trained our eyes. Sometimes the very presence of God interrupts us so deeply that we do not know what we are seeing. The disciples were not looking at calm water and giving thanks. They were looking at a figure coming across the waves in the night, and their fear gave the first interpretation.
Fear is not always a liar because it sees nothing. Often fear is powerful because it sees something real and explains it without hope. It sees the bill and says, “You will not make it.” It sees the medical report and says, “This is the end.” It sees the strained relationship and says, “Nothing will ever heal.” It sees the long road and says, “You do not have enough strength.” Fear looks at the same scene faith looks at, but fear removes Jesus from the picture. That is why the voice of Jesus matters so much in this story. Before Peter ever steps out, before the wind ever stops, before the disciples understand everything, Jesus speaks.
“Take courage. It is I. Do not be afraid.”
He does not begin with an explanation. He begins with His presence. He does not say, “Here is why the wind rose.” He does not say, “Here is the full purpose of this difficult crossing.” He does not give them a map, a schedule, or a lecture. He gives them Himself. Take courage. It is I. Do not be afraid. There are moments in life when what we need most is not a complete answer but a deeper awareness that Jesus is not absent. We want reasons, and sometimes reasons come later. But often the first mercy is not explanation. It is recognition. It is realizing that the shape moving toward us in the storm is not destruction. It is the Lord.
That is where the story begins to press against the hidden place in us. The disciples were already in the boat. They had already been obedient. They had already been struggling. Jesus had already come toward them. His voice had already reached them. But Peter wanted more than survival in the boat. He said, “Lord, if it is You, tell me to come to You on the water.” That is a dangerous prayer if we really listen to it. Peter was not asking for the storm to stop first. He was asking for permission to move toward Jesus while the storm was still there.
Most of us want the opposite. We want Jesus to make the water safe enough that stepping out no longer requires faith. We want the fear lowered, the risk removed, the future confirmed, the outcome guaranteed. Then we will obey. Then we will move. Then we will trust. But Peter asks to come to Jesus on the water, not after the water becomes ordinary ground. Something in him understood, even if only for a moment, that the safest place was not the boat if Jesus was outside of it. The safest place was wherever Jesus was calling him.
That is not a call to recklessness. It is not a call to prove something to people. It is not a call to jump into every storm just because we want a dramatic story. Peter did not step out because he was bored. He did not step out because he wanted applause. He stepped out because Jesus said, “Come.” That one word made the difference. Faith does not live by impulse. Faith lives by the voice of Christ.
And maybe that is where Chapter 1 has to leave us for a moment, not with Peter sinking yet, and not with the storm calmed yet, but with that space between the voice and the step. Because many people are standing there right now. They are not faithless. They are not careless. They are simply looking at the water and trying to decide whether they trust the voice more than the waves. They have heard Jesus say, “Come,” but the boat still feels familiar under their hands. The wind is still loud. The night is still real. The water still looks impossible. Yet somewhere in the middle of all that fear, Jesus is standing where no one else can stand, calling them toward a life that cannot be explained without Him.
Chapter 2: The Step That Felt Too Small to Matter
There is a moment before a hard conversation when your hand just sits on the car door handle. You have already parked. The engine is off. The building is right there through the windshield. Maybe it is your workplace after a mistake you need to own. Maybe it is a hospital room where someone you love is waiting. Maybe it is a family gathering where you know the old tension will be sitting at the table before you even walk in. From the outside, nothing dramatic is happening. You are just sitting there. But inside, something real is being decided. Will I get out of the car? Will I walk in? Will I do the next right thing even though my stomach is tight and I do not know how it will go?
That is the part of Peter walking on the water that we sometimes rush past. We love the image of him standing on the sea. We talk about the miracle, the wind, the fear, the sinking, and the hand of Jesus lifting him up. But before any of that, Peter had to move his weight from the boat to the water. He had to take one ordinary human step into something no ordinary human being could control.
The boat was familiar. It may not have felt safe in the storm, but it was still the thing he knew. It had edges. It had wood. It had other disciples inside it. It had the comfort of being where everyone else was. That matters because sometimes the familiar place can feel safer than the faithful place, even when the familiar place is full of fear.
Peter did not step into calm water. He stepped into moving water. He did not step into a quiet morning with the sun on his face. He stepped into night, wind, spray, and uncertainty. He stepped because Jesus said, “Come.” That word was enough to make the impossible place become the place of obedience.
I think a lot of people want faith to feel bigger than it usually feels in the beginning. We imagine faith as a blazing confidence, a bold speech, a clean certainty that removes the shaking from our hands. But often faith begins as something much quieter. It begins with one step. One apology. One prayer. One honest sentence. One decision not to quit. One call made after weeks of avoiding it. One morning where you get up and do what love requires even though you do not feel strong.
That can disappoint us, because we want our faith to feel heroic before we move. We want to feel brave before we obey. We want the fear to leave before we take the step. But Peter teaches us that courage is not always what you feel before your foot touches the water. Sometimes courage is discovered after you move toward Jesus while fear is still speaking.
This is where the story becomes deeply personal. Peter did not ask to walk on water so he could become impressive. He asked to come to Jesus. That is the difference between spiritual courage and spiritual performance. Performance wants the story. Faith wants the Lord. Performance wants people to notice the step. Faith is trying to get closer to the One who called.
That difference matters because people can use faith language to chase attention. They can call every risky impulse obedience. They can mistake drama for devotion. But Peter’s step only made sense because Jesus was there. The water was not the point. Jesus was the point. The miracle was not simply that Peter walked on something impossible. The miracle was that a man in a storm trusted the voice of Christ enough to move toward Him.
Maybe the step in front of you does not look like much to anyone else. Maybe nobody would make a video about it. Maybe nobody would call it a miracle. Maybe it looks like sitting down with your spouse and telling the truth without attacking. Maybe it looks like deleting the message before you send it because you know it is coming from pride. Maybe it looks like going back to church after a season of distance. Maybe it looks like opening the Bible again after months of feeling spiritually dry. Maybe it looks like asking for help instead of pretending you are fine. Maybe it looks like forgiving someone in your heart while still using wisdom about access and boundaries.
Those steps matter because they are often where the real crossing begins. Not in the loud moment everyone sees, but in the quiet decision where you stop letting fear make every choice for you.
Peter stepped out, and for a moment, he walked. We should not skip that either. Before he sank, he walked. Before fear overwhelmed him, faith carried him. Before the wind became louder in his attention, the word of Jesus was strong enough under his feet. That means Peter’s story is not simply a story about failure. It is also a story about a man who actually did something impossible because he trusted Jesus.
Many people only remember that Peter sank. But I do not want to be too hard on Peter. The other disciples stayed in the boat. Peter got out. He may have panicked, but he also moved. He may have needed saving, but he also obeyed. There is something tender and honest about that. Jesus did not choose perfect people who never shook. He worked with people whose faith had movement and weakness tangled together.
That gives me hope, because my own faith has not always looked clean. Maybe yours has not either. Sometimes we trust God and still feel afraid. Sometimes we obey and then lose focus. Sometimes we start well and then notice the wind. Sometimes we mean it when we say, “Lord, I trust You,” and five minutes later we are fighting panic again. That does not mean the step was fake. It means we are human beings learning to trust a real Savior.
There is a mother somewhere who prays over her child with genuine faith and then cries in the laundry room because she is scared. There is a man trying to rebuild his life after failure who believes God can restore him and still flinches every time he remembers what he lost. There is a young person trying to follow Jesus in a world that laughs at faith, and some days they feel strong while other days they feel alone. Faith does not always arrive as one solid block of certainty. Sometimes faith is a trembling hand reaching toward Christ while the rest of you is still learning how to stand.
Peter began to sink when he saw the wind. That is how Matthew says it, and it is an interesting phrase because you cannot really see wind by itself. You see what the wind is doing. You see the waves rise. You see the water break. You feel the force against your body. Peter saw the evidence of the wind and became afraid.
That is how fear often works. It does not need to invent everything. It points to evidence. It says, “Look at the numbers. Look at the diagnosis. Look at the distance. Look at the silence. Look at the history. Look at what happened last time.” Fear gathers facts, but it arranges them without Jesus at the center. That is what makes it so convincing. It can sound realistic while quietly forgetting the One who called you.
Peter was not crazy for noticing the wind. The wind was there. The danger was real. But the wind became the loudest thing in his attention. He moved from looking at Jesus to measuring the storm. He moved from responding to the voice to calculating the impossibility. That is when he began to sink.
I know that place. Many people do. You take a step of faith, and for a while you are moving. You start healing. You start praying again. You start showing up. You start telling the truth. You start rebuilding. Then one hard day comes, and suddenly the old fear starts talking. You look around and think, “What am I doing? Who did I think I was? This is too much. I cannot keep going.” The wind has not changed who Jesus is, but it has captured your attention.
Peter’s prayer in that moment was not polished. It was not long. It was not impressive. He cried, “Lord, save me.” That may be one of the most honest prayers in Scripture. It is the prayer of someone who no longer has the energy to sound strong. It is the prayer of a man who knows he cannot rescue himself. It is the prayer of faith stripped down to its barest truth.
Lord, save me.
Sometimes that is the prayer that keeps a person alive. Not a paragraph. Not a speech. Not a beautiful sentence someone would frame and hang on the wall. Just three words from a sinking place. Lord, save me. Help me. Hold me. Do not let me go under. I thought I could stand longer than this. I thought I was stronger than this. I took the step, but now I am afraid.
And immediately, Jesus reached out His hand.
That word matters. Immediately. Jesus did not let Peter sink to teach him a longer lesson. He did not stand back until Peter had learned enough. He did not say, “You should have kept your eyes on Me, so figure it out.” He reached out His hand and caught him. There was correction, yes. Jesus asked why he doubted. But the correction came from the hand that was already holding him.
That is the mercy of Jesus. He can correct you without abandoning you. He can challenge your little faith while saving you from the water. He can tell the truth about your fear while refusing to let fear have the final word.
Maybe that is what someone needs most from this chapter of the story. The step matters, but so does the hand. Your courage matters, but your Savior matters more. Your obedience matters, but your rescue does not depend on you performing faith perfectly. Peter was not kept by the strength of his focus. He was kept by the reach of Jesus.
The life of faith is not a life where you never sink. It is a life where you learn who to cry out to when you do. It is a life where you take the next step because Jesus calls, and when your strength gives way, you find out His hand was closer than your fear told you.
Maybe the water in front of you is not asking for a speech today. Maybe it is asking for one honest step toward Jesus. Not to impress anyone. Not to prove you are fearless. Not to create a dramatic testimony. Just to move toward Him because He called you. And if your foot shakes, let it shake. If your voice trembles, let it tremble. If the wind is loud, do not pretend it is silent. Just do not let the wind become louder than the One saying, “Come.”
Chapter 3: The Hand That Reaches Before the Lecture
A person can look calm in a waiting room while everything inside them is shaking. They sit under bright lights with a paper cup of water in their hand, pretending to read a form they have already read twice, listening for their name to be called. Maybe it is a doctor’s office. Maybe it is a bank. Maybe it is a school meeting about a child who is struggling. The chair is ordinary. The clock is ordinary. The carpet is ordinary. But the heart is not ordinary in that moment. The heart is asking questions it cannot say out loud. What happens if the answer is bad? What happens if I cannot fix this? What happens if I am not as strong as everyone thinks I am?
That is where Peter’s sinking becomes more than a dramatic moment on the water. It becomes honest. He had enough faith to step out, but not enough strength to stay above the fear on his own. That sounds like a contradiction until life teaches you it is not. You can trust Jesus and still tremble. You can begin in obedience and still need rescuing. You can take a real step of faith and still find yourself crying for help before the moment is over.
I think we are often too hard on Peter because we read the story from dry ground. We know how the scene ends. We know Jesus catches him. We know the boat is waiting. We know the disciples will worship. But Peter did not have the benefit of reading the chapter after it happened. He had wind on his face, water under his feet, and fear rising through his body. He was living the sentence before it became Scripture.
That matters because many people are living their sentence right now. They have not reached the part where the storm calms. They have not reached the part where they can explain what God was doing. They are still in the middle of the sentence, somewhere between “Come” and “Lord, save me.” It is easy for people on the shore to talk about courage. It is harder when the water is moving under your feet.
Peter began to sink, and he did not have time to prepare a beautiful prayer. He did not have time to organize his thoughts, clean up his fear, or turn his panic into something impressive. He cried out, “Lord, save me.” That prayer is so short that a proud person might think it is too simple. But when you are sinking, simple is not shallow. Simple is honest.
Sometimes the holiest prayer you can pray is not long. It is not polished. It is not filled with religious phrases. It is the prayer you whisper in the hallway before walking into the room. It is the prayer you breathe while holding the steering wheel in the driveway. It is the prayer you say when the message comes in and your stomach drops. It is the prayer that rises when you do not have enough strength to pretend anymore. Lord, save me.
And Jesus immediately reached out His hand.
That is the part I do not want to rush past. Jesus did not first give Peter a speech. He did not first ask for an explanation. He did not leave him in the water until Peter understood the lesson. He reached out His hand and caught him. The correction came, but the rescue came first.
That shows us the heart of Jesus.
He is not standing far away from sinking people with folded arms. He is not waiting for terrified people to become impressive before He reaches. He is not measuring the elegance of the prayer before He responds. Peter was wet, afraid, and failing in the middle of a miracle, and Jesus caught him.
There is deep mercy in that. Because some people carry shame not only about the storm, but about the fact that they panicked in it. They think, “I should have trusted better. I should have been stronger. I should not have fallen apart. I should not still be scared after all these years of believing.” They do not only need help with the water. They need help with the shame that comes after the water.
But Jesus does not shame Peter while Peter is going under. He saves him. He does speak truth to him. He says, “You of little faith, why did you doubt?” But He says it while holding him, not while abandoning him. That difference matters. Jesus can correct us from closeness. He can tell the truth while His hand is already wrapped around us. His correction is not rejection. His correction is part of rescue.
A father understands this when a child falls while learning to ride a bike. If the child is on the pavement, crying, scraped, and scared, a loving father does not begin by delivering a lecture from the porch. He runs to the child. He lifts them. He checks the knee. He holds the small shaking body. The teaching may come. The child may need to learn balance, courage, attention, and trust. But love reaches first.
That is not softness. That is the way love teaches without crushing the heart. Jesus is not less holy because He is tender. He is not less truthful because He is merciful. The same Jesus who names Peter’s doubt also keeps Peter from drowning. The same Lord who calls us higher is the One who pulls us up when we fall.
I want to say this carefully because someone may need it. Your sinking moment does not cancel your step of faith. Peter still stepped out of the boat. That matters. He did not stay where fear was familiar. He moved toward Jesus. The fact that he needed rescuing does not erase the fact that he obeyed. The fact that he became afraid does not mean the whole step was fake.
Some people throw away their whole story because one chapter got messy. They say, “I tried to trust God, but I failed.” Maybe you did not fail the way you think you failed. Maybe you stepped out, got scared, cried for help, and discovered that Jesus was closer than the water. That is not a ruined testimony. That is a real one.
Real faith stories are not always clean. They include trembling, confusion, rescue, correction, and mercy. They include moments where we look braver from a distance than we felt on the inside. They include times when we begin with our eyes on Jesus and then have to be pulled back when the wind gets too loud. That does not make the story worthless. It makes it human.
The question is not whether you have ever sunk. The question is who you cried out to when you did.
That is where the story becomes personal again. When fear rises, we reach for something. Some people reach for control. Some reach for anger. Some reach for numbing. Some reach for isolation. Some reach for old habits that make the moment quieter but leave the soul heavier. Peter reached for Jesus with the only prayer he could manage.
There is a difference between sinking away from Christ and sinking toward Him. Peter’s body was going down, but his cry went up. That may be where some people are today. Their circumstances feel like they are pulling them under, but their heart still knows where to cry. They are not as steady as they want to be. They are not as confident as they look. But somewhere under all the fear, they can still say, “Lord, save me.”
That prayer is enough to begin.
Not because the words are magic. Not because three words force God’s hand. It is enough because the One hearing it is merciful. The power is not in the length of the prayer. The power is in the Savior who reaches.
When Jesus caught Peter, He did not teleport him back to the boat. They still had to move together. That detail is not spelled out with every step, but it is there in the movement of the story. Jesus and Peter came back to the boat. The man who had walked, sunk, cried, and been caught had to return with Jesus through the same storm he had feared.
Sometimes rescue does not mean you are instantly removed from the situation. Sometimes rescue means Jesus gets you through it with His hand on you. The storm may not stop the second you pray. The appointment may still happen. The conversation may still need to be faced. The bill may still need to be opened. The grief may still have mornings where it sits beside you. But you are not alone in the water anymore.
That changes everything.
The hand of Jesus does not always erase the path. It makes the path survivable. It turns panic into dependence. It turns drowning into being held. It turns the impossible water into the place where you learn that your Savior is not only powerful from a distance. He is near enough to catch you.
I wonder what Peter felt when his hand grabbed the hand of Jesus. Relief, surely. Embarrassment, maybe. Shock, probably. The wind was still there. The water was still there. The other disciples were still watching. But none of that was the most important thing anymore. The most important thing was that Jesus had him.
That is what faith comes back to again and again. Not that we never feel the wind. Not that we never misjudge our own strength. Not that we never cry out in fear. Faith comes back to the hand that reaches when ours is empty.
Maybe you are in a sinking place right now. Not because you never believed, but because you got tired. Not because you rejected Jesus, but because the wind has been louder than you expected. Not because your faith was false, but because you are human and the storm has been real. Do not waste the moment pretending you are fine. Cry out. Let the prayer be short if it has to be. Let it be messy if it has to be. Let it come from the deepest place you have left.
Lord, save me.
That is not the prayer of a person beyond hope. That is the prayer of someone who still knows where help comes from. And the Jesus who walked over the sea is still the Jesus whose hand reaches before the lecture, whose mercy comes before the explanation, and whose grip is stronger than the water beneath you.
Chapter 4: When the Wind Does Not Stop Right Away
There is a certain kind of morning that feels unfair before your feet even touch the floor. You wake up tired, and the problem is still there. The conversation is still unresolved. The bill is still unpaid. The diagnosis still has not changed. The grief still has the same shape it had yesterday. You prayed the night before, and maybe you even felt a little peace for a while, but then morning comes, the phone lights up, the body feels heavy, and the same life is waiting for you. That kind of morning can make a person wonder whether anything really changed.
That is one of the reasons I do not want to rush past the walk back to the boat. Peter cried out, Jesus caught him, and then they came back together. The storm did not appear to stop the second Jesus grabbed Peter’s hand. Matthew tells us the wind died down when they climbed into the boat. That means there was a stretch of time, even if it was short, when Peter was no longer sinking but the wind was still blowing.
That is a real place in the life of faith. You are not drowning like you were, but the situation is not calm yet. Jesus has reached you, but the pressure has not disappeared. You have been helped, but you are still walking through the same conditions that scared you. That can confuse people. We sometimes think rescue should mean immediate relief from every hard circumstance. Sometimes it does. God can calm things suddenly. He can open doors quickly. He can change hearts, change outcomes, and change the whole atmosphere in a moment. But sometimes rescue means His hand is on you while the wind is still hitting your face.
That kind of rescue is not less real. It may actually form something deeper in us. Anyone can say thank You when the water is flat and the moon is shining and the boat feels steady again. But there is a quieter faith that grows when you realize Jesus is holding you before the storm is finished. You may still have to walk into the meeting. You may still have to face the doctor. You may still have to make the hard call. You may still have to sit across the table and tell the truth. But something is different now. You are no longer facing it as someone alone in the water.
A man sitting in his truck before work may understand this better than anyone. He may have prayed in the driveway with his hands still on the steering wheel. He may have asked God for strength because he knows the pressure inside that building is not going to be easy. The people have not changed overnight. The workload has not disappeared. The supervisor is still difficult. The fear about losing the job is still sitting in the back of his mind. But he breathes, opens the door, and walks in with a small piece of faith that was not there before. The wind is still blowing, but Jesus is with him in it.
That is not a small thing. Many of us underestimate the miracle of being kept. We only recognize miracles when the problem vanishes. We forget that there is also a miracle in not being destroyed by what is still present. There is a miracle in getting up again. There is a miracle in staying honest when fear wants to make you false. There is a miracle in not giving your pain permission to turn you cruel. There is a miracle in walking through a hard season with a heart that still belongs to God.
Peter had to learn that the power was not in his own ability to stay focused forever. The power was in Jesus. This matters because many people secretly believe their faith depends on never feeling weak. They think faith means holding themselves together so tightly that nothing shakes them. But the story does not show Peter holding himself up. It shows Jesus holding Peter. That is a different kind of hope.
If our confidence is in the strength of our own grip, we will live exhausted. We will keep measuring ourselves, testing ourselves, judging ourselves, and wondering whether we have enough faith to make it through the next wave. But the Gospel keeps bringing us back to something better. Our hope is not that we never tremble. Our hope is that Jesus does not lose His hold when we do.
There is honesty in admitting the wind still bothers us. Some people think admitting fear dishonors God. I do not believe that. Pretending is not faith. Peter did not pretend. He cried out. The disciples did not pretend. They were terrified. The Bible is honest about human fear because God is not interested in a fake version of us. He wants the real heart. He wants the part of us that wakes up at two in the morning. He wants the part that gets nervous before the appointment. He wants the part that feels small when the future is unclear. He wants the part that is still learning how to trust.
What matters is not whether the wind gets your attention for a moment. What matters is whether the wind gets the final word. Peter saw the wind and became afraid, but his fear did not get to finish the story. Jesus did. That is the difference. Fear may interrupt you. It may shake you. It may make your breathing quicken and your thoughts scatter. But when you cry out to Christ, fear does not have to become your master.
There is a quiet temptation after Jesus helps us. It is the temptation to feel ashamed that we needed help at all. We climb back toward the boat wet, embarrassed, and aware that other people saw us struggle. We replay the moment. We wonder what others think. We tell ourselves we should have done better. But I wonder if Peter’s memory of that night was not mainly the embarrassment of sinking. I wonder if, later in life, what stayed with him was the feeling of that hand catching him. Shame remembers the water. Grace remembers the hand.
That is important for someone who keeps defining themselves by the moment they panicked. Maybe you took a step toward healing and then fell back into fear. Maybe you tried to rebuild trust and then had a hard day. Maybe you made progress spiritually and then found yourself struggling again with the same old heaviness. Maybe you thought you were past something, and then one comment, one memory, one night of poor sleep brought it all roaring back. That does not mean Jesus has let go of you. It means you are still learning how to walk with Him in the wind.
The walk back to the boat may have been humbling, but it was also holy. Peter came back with Jesus. He came back knowing something about the Lord that he did not know in the same way before. He knew Jesus could call him. He knew Jesus could sustain him. He knew Jesus could catch him. He knew Jesus could correct him without rejecting him. He knew Jesus could bring him back.
Some lessons cannot be learned from inside the boat. That does not mean everyone in the boat was worthless or cowardly in some simple way. It means Peter’s experience gave him a knowledge of Jesus that came through risk, fear, failure, and rescue. There are things you only learn about the faithfulness of Christ after your own strength has not been enough. There are things you only learn about His mercy after you have had to cry out from a place you never wanted to be.
That is why we should be gentle with people who are still wet from the water. Sometimes the person who looks shaken is carrying a fresh revelation of grace. Sometimes the person who just had to be rescued understands Jesus more deeply than the person who never left the boat. Sometimes the testimony is not, “I walked perfectly.” Sometimes the testimony is, “I sank, and He caught me.”
When they got into the boat, the wind died down. The storm that had seemed so large was suddenly under the authority of Christ in a way the disciples could see and feel. The noise stopped. The boat steadied. The bodies that had been tense all night could breathe again. And the disciples worshiped Him, saying, “Truly You are the Son of God.”
That worship came after the fear, after the misrecognition, after the step, after the sinking, after the rescue, after the walk back. It did not come from people who had stayed untouched by trouble. It came from people who had seen Jesus meet them in it. Their worship had storm water in it. Their confession had trembling in it. Their understanding had been formed in the dark.
Sometimes that is how worship becomes real in us too. Not because everything has always been easy, but because we have seen enough of Jesus in the hard places to know He is Lord there also. We have seen Him in the hospital hallway, in the lonely kitchen, in the car before work, in the tired prayer, in the apology, in the grief, in the rebuilding. We have seen Him come toward us over what we thought might destroy us. We have felt His hand when our own strength failed.
The point of the story is not that storms are pleasant or fear is imaginary. The point is that Jesus is greater than the storm and nearer than fear tells us. He does not only stand at the finish line after everything is calm. He comes across the water while the night is still dark. He calls us toward Him when the boat feels safer. He catches us when we sink. He walks us back when we are embarrassed. He brings us into worship with a deeper understanding of who He is.
So if the wind has not stopped yet, do not assume Jesus is absent. If the situation has not changed yet, do not assume nothing happened when you prayed. If you still feel weak, do not assume your faith is worthless. The hand that caught Peter did not wait for perfect conditions, and it did not demand perfect courage. It reached into real fear, real water, real wind, and real need.
You may still be walking back to the boat. You may still be wet from the moment that scared you. You may still be learning how to breathe again. But if Jesus has you, then the storm is not the only truth in the scene. His hand is there too. And sometimes the first sign of peace is not that the wind has stopped. Sometimes the first sign of peace is that you are still standing because He is holding you.
Chapter 5: The Boat Was Never Meant to Be God
A person can spend an entire afternoon trying to feel safe by organizing things that still may not hold. They clean the desk. They rewrite the budget. They check the calendar. They make a list for the week, then a second list because the first one does not calm them enough. There is nothing wrong with planning. There is nothing wrong with being responsible. But sometimes the paper, the numbers, and the careful little boxes on the calendar become more than tools. They become the place where the heart quietly asks for salvation.
That is why the boat matters in this story. The boat was not evil. It was not foolish. It was not a symbol of unbelief by itself. Jesus put the disciples in that boat. It had a purpose. It carried them into the crossing. It gave them something solid under their feet for a while. It was part of their obedience. So the lesson cannot be that boats are bad and every practical thing in life should be thrown away in the name of faith.
That would be reckless, not faithful.
The boat matters because it was useful, but it was never meant to be God.
We all have boats. We have routines, jobs, savings accounts, relationships, plans, calendars, medicine, skills, experience, homes, cars, and people we trust. These things can be gifts. They can be ways God helps carry us. They can be part of wisdom. A person should not despise the ordinary supports God allows in life. A budget can be faithful. A doctor can be a blessing. A counselor can be part of healing. A steady job can be an answer to prayer. A locked door at night can be simple wisdom. Faith is not pretending practical things have no value.
But the danger begins when the boat becomes the source of our peace.
That is when we start to panic the moment the boat shakes.
When the job feels uncertain, our identity shakes. When the relationship becomes strained, our hope shakes. When the money gets tight, our peace shakes. When our body feels weak, our confidence shakes. When the plan breaks, our faith feels like it is breaking with it. Not because those things do not matter, but because somewhere along the way, we started asking them to give us what only Jesus can give.
The disciples were in a real boat on real water, and for a long time that boat was the only thing between them and the sea. I do not blame them for wanting it to hold. I do not blame them for gripping the sides when the waves hit. Human beings are not wrong for wanting stability. We are not wrong for wanting protection. We are not wrong for wanting a place to stand.
But Peter had to learn that the safest place was not always the most familiar place.
That is uncomfortable.
Because familiar feels safe even when it is full of fear. A person can stay in a bad pattern simply because they know the pattern. They can avoid the honest conversation because silence is familiar. They can keep carrying resentment because forgiveness feels like stepping onto water. They can stay spiritually numb because waking up would require facing pain. They can cling to control because surrender feels too exposed.
The boat can be shaking, but at least it is known.
That is why the word “Come” is so powerful. Jesus was not calling Peter into emptiness. He was calling Peter to Himself. The water was not safe by nature. The water was safe only because Jesus was there. That difference matters. Faith is not trusting danger. Faith is trusting Jesus in a place where danger is real.
Sometimes people talk about faith as if it means ignoring wisdom. That is not what Peter did. Peter did not jump out because he wanted to test himself. He did not say, “Watch this.” He did not leap into the water because he was tired of being ordinary. He asked Jesus to command him. “Lord, if it is You, tell me to come to You on the water.” Peter needed the voice before he took the step.
That is a word for people who confuse impulse with obedience. Not every risk is faith. Not every dramatic move is God. Not every open door should be walked through. Not every strong feeling is a calling. Faith listens. Faith waits for the voice of Jesus. Faith may move courageously, but it does not need to perform for the crowd.
At the same time, there are moments when we know the voice of Jesus is calling us, and we keep hiding behind the boat anyway. We know we need to apologize, but we keep calling it timing. We know we need to forgive, but we keep calling bitterness discernment. We know we need to begin again, but we keep calling fear wisdom. We know we need to trust God with the next step, but we keep asking for a guarantee He never promised to give.
A woman sitting at her kitchen table with an email open may know this feeling. Maybe she has written the message three times and deleted it three times. It is not a dramatic email. It is not something the world will see. It is a humble sentence. “I am sorry.” Or, “I need help.” Or, “I was wrong.” Or, “Can we talk?” Her finger hovers over the button. The boat is the silence she has been hiding in. The water is the vulnerability of telling the truth. No one else sees the size of that moment, but Jesus does.
Many acts of faith look small from the outside because the real storm is inside the person taking the step.
That is one of the reasons we should be careful judging another person’s courage. What looks easy to one person may be water to someone else. Speaking up may be water. Resting may be water. Trusting again may be water. Letting go may be water. Asking for help may be water. Walking into church after shame kept you away may be water. Opening your heart after disappointment may be water. Staying faithful when you are tired may be water.
And Jesus knows the difference.
He knows when the step is costly. He knows when the voice is shaking. He knows when obedience looks simple but feels impossible. He knows when you are leaving the familiar place not because you are fearless, but because He called you.
The boat was not the enemy, but it could not become the Lord.
That may be one of the quiet lessons in the story. God gives us things to use, but not things to worship. He gives us people to love, but not people to replace Him. He gives us wisdom, but not wisdom as an excuse to avoid trust. He gives us structure, but not structure as a substitute for surrender. He gives us boats, but the boat cannot be the center.
The disciples eventually worshiped Jesus, not the boat. That matters. When the wind died down, they did not bow to the wood that had carried them. They bowed to the Son of God. They finally saw more clearly that the One walking on the water, catching Peter, and calming the wind was greater than the thing they had been sitting inside.
A lot of spiritual growth is learning to thank God for the boat without making the boat our God.
Thank Him for the job, but do not let the job become your worth. Thank Him for the relationship, but do not let the relationship become your whole identity. Thank Him for the plan, but do not let the plan become your peace. Thank Him for the gift, but do not cling to the gift so tightly that you cannot follow the Giver when He calls.
That is not easy. Many of us do not realize how much we trust the boat until it starts taking on water. We do not realize how much of our peace was tied to predictable circumstances until those circumstances shift. We do not realize how deeply we depend on being in control until obedience asks us to move without control.
But Jesus is patient with people learning this. He did not mock the disciples for being in the boat. He did not despise their fear. He did not reject Peter when his courage became panic. He kept revealing Himself in layers. First as the One who sent them. Then as the One who prayed while they crossed. Then as the One who came to them on the water. Then as the One who called Peter. Then as the One who caught him. Then as the One who calmed the storm. Then as the One worthy of worship.
Maybe He is doing something like that in us too. Not all at once. Not in a way we can always understand while it is happening. But slowly, through pressure, through steps, through rescue, through correction, through mercy, He is teaching us where real safety is found.
Real safety is not the absence of waves.
Real safety is the presence of Jesus.
That does not mean we stop caring about our responsibilities. It means we stop asking our responsibilities to save us. It does not mean we stop planning. It means we stop believing the plan is stronger than the Lord. It does not mean we become careless. It means we become surrendered.
There is a freedom in that, but it is a freedom many of us reach slowly. We loosen our grip one finger at a time. We learn to hold good things with gratitude instead of desperation. We learn to step when Jesus calls, even if the familiar place still feels easier. We learn to pray not only, “Lord, keep my boat steady,” but also, “Lord, keep my eyes on You.”
Because one day the boat may shake.
One day the thing you leaned on may not feel as strong as it used to. One day the plan may change. One day the familiar place may not be enough. And when that day comes, the question will not only be whether the boat can hold. The deeper question will be whether you know the voice of the One standing on the water.
Peter learned that the boat was useful.
But Jesus was Lord.
And that is where faith grows up. Not when we despise the ordinary things God has given us, but when we finally stop asking them to carry the weight of our souls. The boat can help you cross, but it cannot save you. The plan can guide your steps, but it cannot give you peace. The people you love can walk beside you, but they cannot be your foundation. Only Jesus can stand over the deep and call your name with authority.
And when He says, “Come,” the water is not empty.
He is there.
Chapter 6: The Peace That Comes After Being Held
There is a quiet that comes after a hard moment, and it does not always feel like victory at first. It can feel like sitting at the edge of the bed after a long day, shoes still on, staring at the floor because your body made it through something your heart is still trying to understand. The appointment is over. The conversation happened. The text was sent. The apology was spoken. The tears finally stopped. Nothing around you looks dramatic anymore, but something inside you knows you are not standing in the same place you stood before.
That is how I imagine the boat after Jesus and Peter climbed back in.
The wind died down. The water that had been fighting them became quiet. The bodies that had been tense could finally loosen. The disciples had spent the night straining, fearing, misunderstanding, watching Peter step out, watching him sink, watching Jesus catch him, and then seeing the storm lose its voice. The danger was no longer pressing against them in the same way. But I do not believe they simply returned to casual conversation as if nothing had happened.
Some moments change the room after they are over.
When the wind stopped, the disciples worshiped Jesus and said, “Truly You are the Son of God.” That confession did not come from theory. It came from experience. They had seen Jesus heal people before. They had heard Him teach. They had watched Him feed the hungry. But this night brought the truth closer to their own fear. They were not watching someone else receive mercy from a safe distance. They were the ones in the boat. They were the ones afraid. They were the ones who needed Him to come.
That is often how faith deepens. We may believe many true things about Jesus before we have to lean on them with our own weight. We may know He is faithful because someone told us. We may know He is merciful because we read it. We may know He is powerful because the Bible says so. But there are seasons when those truths stop being words we agree with and become the ground under our feet.
A person can sit in church for years and sing about God’s faithfulness, and then one day find themselves in a hospital hallway with bad coffee in their hand, waiting for news about someone they love. Suddenly the song is not just a song. It is the only thread they can hold. They are not thinking about theology in large words. They are thinking, “Jesus, be here. Jesus, help us. Jesus, do not let me fall apart.” And when they make it through that hallway without losing their soul, faith becomes more than something they heard. It becomes something they lived.
The disciples worshiped because Jesus had become undeniable to them in the storm. Not undeniable in a shallow way, as if they would never struggle again. They would struggle plenty after this. Peter himself would still have weak moments. The disciples would still misunderstand things. They would still be human. But they had seen something they could not unsee. Jesus was not only a teacher who spoke about God. He stood where no human being could stand. He commanded what no human being could command. He reached when no human being could reach.
That is why storms, as painful as they are, sometimes leave behind a clearer knowledge of Christ. I want to be careful with that because pain should never be romanticized. Storms can hurt. Fear can wear a person down. Loss can leave marks. We should not speak lightly about what people survive. But it is also true that many people come out of certain seasons with a deeper understanding of Jesus than they had before. Not because the season was good, but because He was good in it.
There is a difference between saying the storm was good and saying Jesus was faithful in the storm. We do not have to call every hard thing good in order to honor God. We do not have to pretend fear was pleasant, betrayal was harmless, grief was easy, or pressure was small. The disciples did not worship the wind. They worshiped Jesus. That matters. Faith does not require us to be grateful for everything that hit us. Faith teaches us to recognize the One who held us while it hit.
Maybe that is a distinction somebody needs. You do not have to pretend the hard season did not hurt. You do not have to call the wound beautiful. You do not have to smile at the storm itself. But you can still say, “Jesus met me there. Jesus kept me there. Jesus showed me something there that I might not have known in the same way otherwise.”
After the wind died down, Peter had a memory nobody else in the boat had. The others saw Jesus from inside the boat. Peter knew what His hand felt like when he was sinking. That does not make Peter better than the others, but it does mean his worship carried a personal weight. He had not just seen power. He had been caught by mercy.
There are people like that all around us. They may not always look dramatic. They may not talk loudly about what they have survived. They may go to work, make dinner, answer emails, take care of children, help aging parents, pay bills, and keep moving like ordinary people. But if you could see their history, you would understand why their worship sounds different. They are not singing because life has been easy. They are singing because they know what it feels like to be held.
Some people worship with storm water still drying on them.
That kind of worship has depth. It has memory in it. It has humility in it. It does not come from pretending to be strong. It comes from knowing you were not strong enough, and Jesus still did not let you go under.
This is where the story starts to speak to the part of us that wants to get back to normal as quickly as possible. After a frightening season, many people want to rush ahead and act like they are fine. They want to move on because sitting with what happened feels uncomfortable. But there are times when we need to let the lesson settle. We need to breathe in the quiet after the wind and ask, “What did Jesus show me about Himself? What did I learn about where I was placing my trust? What fear lost some of its power because He met me there?”
That is not overthinking. That is remembering.
The Bible is full of people being told to remember what God has done. Remembering is not living in the past. It is carrying evidence into the future. The next time the disciples faced fear, they could remember the boat. The next time Peter felt weak, he could remember the hand. The next time water moved under them, they could remember that the sea was not stronger than the Lord.
We need that kind of memory because fear has a short memory and a loud voice. Fear forgets every rescue and exaggerates every threat. Fear says, “This time you are finished.” Faith says, “I have been held before.” Fear says, “You are alone.” Faith says, “He came to me in the dark.” Fear says, “You will sink.” Faith says, “Even when I did, He caught me.”
A woman opening her journal early in the morning may understand this. Maybe she writes down one sentence before the day begins: “God helped me yesterday.” It does not sound impressive, but it matters. She is training her heart to remember. Yesterday was hard, but she did not break. Yesterday she cried, but she prayed. Yesterday she was afraid, but she told the truth. Yesterday the wind was loud, but Jesus did not leave. That small act of remembering can become strength for the next crossing.
The peace that comes after being held is different from the peace that comes from everything going perfectly. Easy peace depends on conditions. Deep peace has a history with God. Easy peace says, “I am okay because nothing is wrong.” Deep peace says, “Something may be wrong, but Jesus is still Lord.” Easy peace vanishes when the water moves. Deep peace remembers the hand.
That kind of peace grows slowly. It is not always loud. It does not always make a person feel fearless. Sometimes it simply gives them enough steadiness to take the next breath, make the next call, forgive the next offense, face the next morning, or pray again after silence. It is the peace of someone who has learned that Jesus is not only present when life is calm. He is present in the crossing, present in the sinking, present in the rescue, and present in the boat afterward.
I think about the disciples sitting there after the wind died down. The moon over the water. The wet clothes. The stunned silence. Peter breathing hard. Jesus with them. The boat steady now. The storm that had felt so large only moments before suddenly unable to compete with the reality of who He was. No wonder they worshiped. No wonder the words came out: “Truly You are the Son of God.”
That confession is where the storm was always trying to lead them, not toward fear as the final truth, but toward a deeper recognition of Jesus. The storm revealed their limits, but Jesus revealed His lordship. The water exposed their fear, but His presence exposed their hope. The night showed them they could not control everything, but the calm showed them they did not have to worship control.
Maybe that is what this chapter of your life is doing too. Maybe it is showing you that the thing you feared most is not stronger than Jesus. Maybe it is showing you that your familiar boat was useful, but not ultimate. Maybe it is showing you that your faith can shake and still be real. Maybe it is teaching you to remember the hand more than the water.
When the wind dies down, do not rush past the worship. Do not move so quickly into the next task that you forget to thank the One who kept you. Sit for a moment in the quiet. Let the truth land. You were afraid, but you were not abandoned. You were weak, but you were not discarded. You cried out, and He reached. You walked through the wind, and somehow, by mercy, you are still here.
The peace after being held is not pride. It is not the confidence of someone who thinks they will never need help again. It is the humble strength of someone who knows exactly where help comes from.
Chapter 7: Learning to Hear Him Above the Wind
There are days when the loudest thing in your life is not a storm outside you, but a voice inside you. You wake up and before your feet reach the floor, the thought is already there. You are behind. You are not enough. This will not work. You should have done more by now. You should be stronger than this. The coffee is still brewing, the morning light is still soft, and already the wind is talking. Nobody else can hear it, but you can. It follows you into the bathroom, into the car, into the first message of the day, into the place where you are trying to be faithful while feeling pulled apart.
That is why the voice of Jesus in the storm matters so much. Before Peter stepped out, before he sank, before Jesus reached for him, there was a voice cutting through the fear. “Take courage. It is I. Do not be afraid.” The wind was real, but it was not the only sound. The water was moving, but it did not get the only word. Jesus spoke into a scene that already had plenty of noise, and faith had to decide which voice carried authority.
That may be one of the hardest parts of following Jesus in ordinary life. We are not usually choosing between silence and God. We are choosing between competing voices. Fear has a voice. Shame has a voice. Pressure has a voice. Regret has a voice. Other people have voices. The past has a voice. The future we imagine has a voice. Sometimes even our own tired body seems to speak, telling us we cannot take one more step. In the middle of all that, Jesus does not always shout the way panic shouts. His voice may come steady, clear, and quiet, but it carries life.
Learning to hear Him above the wind is not a small thing. It is part of spiritual maturity. A person can know many Bible verses and still let fear interpret every situation. A person can believe in Jesus and still spend whole days reacting to the loudest pressure in the room. A person can love God and still forget to listen when anxiety starts making decisions. This does not mean that person is false. It means they are human, and they are learning where to place their attention.
Peter’s trouble began when his attention shifted. Jesus had called him. The water had held him. The impossible had become possible under the word of Christ. But then Peter saw the wind. He saw what the wind was doing. He saw the waves, felt the force, and suddenly the storm became larger in his mind than the voice that had called him. The scene did not change as much as Peter’s focus changed. Jesus was still there. The word “Come” had not expired. But fear began to explain the moment differently.
That happens to us more than we like to admit. We start with trust, and then the wind starts presenting evidence. The bank account says one thing. The doctor says one thing. The strained silence at home says one thing. The empty inbox says one thing. The memory of past failure says one thing. Fear points at all of it and says, “See? You are in trouble.” And because the evidence feels real, we think fear must be telling the whole truth.
But fear can be accurate about details and still wrong about the story.
The waves were real. Peter was not imagining them. The wind was real. The danger was not fake. But fear’s interpretation was incomplete because it did not give enough weight to Jesus. That is often where we get trapped. We think faith means denying the facts. It does not. Faith means refusing to let the facts be interpreted without Christ. Faith does not say the water is dry. Faith says Jesus is Lord over the water.
A father sitting at the kitchen table after his children are asleep may understand this. He has a notebook open, trying to figure out how to handle the month. The numbers are tight. The responsibilities are real. He is not being dramatic. There are actual decisions to make. Fear tells him, “You are failing them.” Shame adds, “A better man would already have this handled.” But somewhere underneath the noise, Jesus is not saying, “Pretend the numbers are not there.” He is saying, “Do not let the numbers name you. Do the next faithful thing. Ask for wisdom. Walk with Me.”
That is a different voice.
The voice of Jesus does not always remove responsibility. It restores identity. It reminds us who He is and who we are in Him. Take courage. It is I. Do not be afraid. He does not say there is no wind. He says He is there. He does not say the crossing never mattered. He says fear does not get to rule the crossing. He does not say Peter has no weakness. He invites Peter to come anyway.
This is where many people need patience with themselves. Learning to hear Jesus above the wind takes practice. It is not usually mastered in one emotional moment. It happens in ordinary choices. It happens when you stop before answering harshly. It happens when you pray before reacting. It happens when you open Scripture not as a duty to check off, but as a way of letting God’s voice become familiar again. It happens when you tell one trusted person the truth instead of letting fear keep you isolated. It happens when you notice the panic rising and say, “This is not the only voice in the room.”
The more we listen to Jesus in small moments, the more recognizable His voice becomes in storms. A person does not usually build deep trust only during crisis. Crisis reveals what has been growing. If the only time we try to listen is when the waves are high, the wind may feel overwhelming. But when we have learned His tone in quieter places, when we have heard His mercy in ordinary mornings, when we have brought Him small fears and small decisions, we begin to recognize Him even when the night is loud.
This does not mean we become perfect listeners. Peter heard Jesus and still became afraid. That comforts me. Jesus does not wait for flawless focus before He works in a life. He calls people who will need rescue. He speaks to people who will need correction. He walks with people whose attention sometimes breaks under pressure. The goal is not to become a person who never struggles to listen. The goal is to become a person who keeps returning to His voice.
There is a difference between being distracted and being surrendered to distraction. There is a difference between fear passing through your mind and fear taking the throne. There is a difference between noticing the wind and letting the wind command you. Peter noticed the wind, and for a moment it overwhelmed him. But his cry still went to Jesus. That means even when his focus broke, his direction did not fully change. He still knew where help was.
That is hope for all of us. Maybe you have had days where fear got too much of your attention. Maybe you reacted from panic. Maybe you let a comment, a setback, a bill, a memory, or a possible future pull your eyes away from Christ. That does not mean the whole story is over. Turn back. Cry out. Let His voice become first again. The mercy of Jesus is not fragile. He is not surprised by the weakness of people who need Him.
One practical way to live this story is to ask a simple question when the wind gets loud: What is Jesus saying that fear is trying to drown out? That question can slow the heart. Fear may be saying, “You are alone,” while Jesus is saying, “I am with you.” Fear may be saying, “You are finished,” while Jesus is saying, “Come back to Me.” Fear may be saying, “Hide,” while Jesus is saying, “Tell the truth.” Fear may be saying, “Control everything,” while Jesus is saying, “Trust Me with the next step.”
This is not a trick. It is a way of learning attention. The Christian life is not only about what we believe in our heads. It is also about what we allow to lead our thoughts when pressure comes. The mind needs shepherding. The heart needs reminding. The soul needs the voice of Christ repeated until it becomes stronger than the familiar voice of fear.
A lonely person in a quiet apartment may know how necessary this is. The evening comes, the room feels too still, and old thoughts begin to gather. Nobody cares. Nothing is changing. You are forgotten. Those thoughts can feel like wind in a closed room. But the follower of Jesus learns, slowly and honestly, to answer the wind with truth. I am seen by God. I am not abandoned. This season is hard, but Jesus is here. I can reach out. I can pray. I can take one faithful step tonight.
Sometimes that one step is not dramatic. It may be washing the dishes instead of sinking deeper into heaviness. It may be sending a message to a friend. It may be reading one Psalm. It may be going to bed instead of letting the night become a battlefield. It may be saying out loud, “Jesus, help me hear You over this.” These small acts matter because they train the heart to respond to the right voice.
Peter’s story teaches us that the wind can be loud, but it is not Lord. The waves can rise, but they do not get to name reality. The night can be dark, but Jesus can still be recognized by those who learn His voice. That is why we keep coming back to Him in prayer, Scripture, honesty, worship, and obedience. Not to earn His nearness, but to become more awake to it.
The storm did not end when Jesus first spoke, but His voice gave the disciples something stronger than the storm to hold onto. That is often where courage begins. Not in a changed circumstance, but in a recovered awareness of who is speaking. The same Jesus who said, “Come,” still calls people today. He calls them out of fear, out of hiding, out of shame, out of paralysis, out of the small life panic tries to build around them. He does not always call them into easy conditions, but He always calls them toward Himself.
So listen carefully when the wind starts talking. Do not pretend it is not loud. Do not shame yourself because you hear it. Just remember it is not the voice that saved you. It is not the voice that died for you. It is not the voice that rose again. It is not the voice that stands over the deep and calls your name. The wind can make noise. Jesus has authority.
And the more you learn to hear Him, the less the storm gets to decide who you become.
Chapter 8: When the Crossing Changes You
There is a kind of evening when you come home after making it through something hard, and everything looks strangely normal. The porch light is on. The keys make the same sound in the lock. The shoes by the door are still where someone left them. The kitchen has the same chairs, the same counter, the same small things waiting to be put away. Nothing in the room announces that you survived anything. But you know. You know what it took to get through that day. You know what you prayed under your breath. You know how close you came to giving in to fear. You know that something inside you had to lean on Jesus in a way it had not leaned before.
That is how I think about the disciples after the storm. They still had to keep living. They still had more roads to walk, more lessons to learn, more failures to face, more grace to receive. The miracle did not turn them into people who never struggled again. But they were not untouched by what happened. Once you have seen Jesus walking over the thing you feared, you cannot pretend He is only Lord in calm weather.
That is the deep gift of this story. It does not teach us that storms are easy. It does not teach us that faith removes every frightening moment before we have to face it. It does not teach us to chase danger or pretend wisdom does not matter. It teaches us that Jesus is not limited by the places that limit us.
Water was a boundary for them. It was depth, danger, distance, and uncertainty. For Jesus, it was a path. That is the part that should stay with us. The very thing that made the disciples feel trapped became the road Jesus used to reach them. The thing they could not control was still under His feet.
That does not mean every hard thing is secretly good. We need to be honest. Some storms are painful. Some seasons leave people tired. Some nights are long. Some losses really hurt. Some pressures are not solved by a simple sentence. Jesus does not ask us to pretend the water is not deep. He asks us to see that He is Lord even there.
That is a stronger hope than pretending.
Pretending says, “I am fine,” when you are not. Faith says, “I am afraid, but Jesus is here.” Pretending says, “This does not hurt,” when it does. Faith says, “This hurts, but it does not get the final word.” Pretending says, “I have everything under control,” when you clearly do not. Faith says, “I do not have control, but I know the One who is holding me.”
That is the kind of faith this story builds. Not loud faith. Not showy faith. Not the kind of faith that needs to impress people. A quieter faith. A real faith. A faith that can sit in a dark room, look at the water, and still listen for the voice of Christ.
There is someone who needs that kind of faith right now. Maybe they are trying to rebuild after a mistake. The world did not end, but the shame still talks. They go through the day doing ordinary things, but inside they keep replaying what happened. Faith for them may not look like a big public victory. It may look like telling the truth, receiving forgiveness, making amends where they can, and refusing to believe that one failure gets to name the rest of their life.
There is someone else carrying a family pressure nobody sees. They are the dependable one. The one people call. The one who figures things out. The one who answers the message, handles the appointment, remembers the need, and keeps moving even when their own heart is tired. Faith for them may look like admitting to Jesus, “I cannot be everyone’s savior. I need You to hold me too.”
There is someone lonely who has learned how to appear busy. The calendar has tasks on it, but the soul still feels unseen. Faith for them may look like believing that Jesus sees them before anyone else does, and that being alone in a season is not the same as being abandoned by God.
That is why the story of Jesus walking on water still matters. It reaches so many different kinds of fear because water takes many forms. For one person, the water is grief. For another, it is money. For another, it is failure. For another, it is obedience. For another, it is the future. For another, it is the quiet pressure of waking up every day and trying to keep a soft heart in a hard world.
But the question is not only, “What is my water?”
The deeper question is, “Where is Jesus in it?”
The disciples first thought He was a ghost. Fear misread Him. That should make us humble. Sometimes we may misread God’s nearness too. We may think He is absent because He is not coming the way we expected. We may think He is late because the night has gone longer than we wanted. We may think He is silent because the wind is loud. But the story tells us that Jesus was moving toward them before they understood what they were seeing.
That gives me hope.
It means Jesus may already be closer than your fear has allowed you to recognize. It means the help of God may not always arrive in the shape you imagined, but His presence is still real. It means the darkness does not confuse Him. It means distance does not stop Him. It means the water beneath you is not stronger than the Lord above it.
Peter’s part of the story gives us another kind of hope. He was bold and afraid. He trusted and doubted. He walked and sank. He obeyed and needed rescue. In other words, he was human. That is why so many of us can find ourselves in him. We are not always one thing. We love Jesus, and we still get scared. We want to obey, and we still look at the wind. We take a step, and then we cry for help. We begin well, and then we need His hand.
And Jesus is not disgusted by that need.
He caught Peter.
That may be one of the most beautiful truths in the whole story. The hand of Jesus reached into Peter’s fear before Peter could fix himself. That means our hope is not built on our ability to perform perfect faith. Our hope is built on the mercy and strength of Christ.
Yes, Jesus calls us to trust Him. Yes, He challenges our doubt. Yes, He invites us beyond the small life fear tries to create. But He does all of that as Savior, not as a distant critic. He is the One who says, “Come.” He is also the One who catches us when we cry, “Lord, save me.”
That combination is everything.
Some people only want a Jesus who comforts but never calls. Others imagine a Jesus who calls but does not comfort. The Gospels give us the real Jesus. He calls Peter out of the boat, and He catches Peter in the water. He invites faith, and He gives mercy. He exposes fear, and He holds the fearful. He does not leave us where we are, but He does not abandon us when we struggle to move.
That is the Jesus worth trusting.
When they reached the boat and the wind died down, worship rose. That is where the crossing led. It led to recognition. It led to confession. It led to a clearer view of who Jesus was. “Truly You are the Son of God.”
Maybe that is where many storms are meant to lead us too. Not to a life where we become proud of our courage, but to a deeper worship of Christ. Not to a story where we say, “Look how strong I was,” but to a testimony where we say, “Look how faithful He was.” Not to a version of faith built on our image, but to a faith built on His presence.
If you are in the boat right now, keep listening.
If you are stepping onto the water, keep your eyes on Jesus.
If you are sinking, cry out.
If He has caught you, let Him bring you back.
If the wind has died down, worship.
And if you are still waiting for the calm, do not assume He is gone. The story of Jesus walking on water tells us He can come in the hour we thought was too late. He can speak over the sound that frightened us. He can call us into obedience when fear wants us frozen. He can hold us when our faith is smaller than we wish it were. He can use the very water we feared as the place where we learn His nearness.
So do not worship the boat.
Do not obey the wind.
Do not let fear be the loudest teacher in your life.
Listen for Jesus.
The same Lord who walked across the sea still knows how to reach people in the dark. The same voice that said, “Take courage,” still speaks to tired hearts. The same hand that caught Peter is still strong enough to hold you. And the same Savior who stood above the water is still calling people into a life that cannot be explained without Him.
Your water may be real.
But Jesus is real too.
And He is Lord over the deep.
Your friend, Douglas Vandergraph Watch Douglas Vandergraph inspiring faith-based videos on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@douglasvandergraph Support the Christian encouragement library through GoFundMe: https://www.gofundme.com/f/help-douglas-vandergraph-build-a-christian-encouragement-lib Support the daily work by buying Douglas a coffee: https://www.buymeacoffee.com/douglasvandergraph
from The disconnect blog
Conspiracies are real and many are admitted to well after the fact. Humanity is funny with time. Seems most forget, don’t care, or live in denial about the myriad of conspiracies that are slowly revealed over time. In general governments around the world do not care all that much about their subjects. Democide (the killing of people by their government) has been a major cause of human casualties. It’s estimated that 170 to 360 million people have been killed by democide in the 20th century alone. Click here for some details. I believe the number to be vastly higher, but you would need to include things like health problems due to bad policies, laws, and immunities created by governments – like industrial waste, pharmaceuticals, and agricultural chemicals.
The USA empire is on the decline, slowly unraveling and collapsing. In general the decline of the west has been in motion a very long time, you could maybe even say with the slow fall of the Roman empire. More recently the British empire really started to unwind after WWI and ramped up its decline during and after WWII with the USA squiggling into that position of world ruler which has lasted till now and is still trying to stay in a dominant position.
If you are a conspiracy theory denialist versus a conspiracy theory realist I’d recommend considering this. At a very basic level isn’t every election cycle around the world full of conspiring men and women vying for a position of power? They have a team that talks behind closed doors making plans to usurp power. Isn’t this a conspiracy? And at a deeper and more disturbing level what are these things listed below if not a conspiracy that actually took place in history only later to be revealed? And if those things happened then, why would you think governments around the world are not acting in a conspiratorial manner today? Are the governments around the world far superior now than they were in the past? Is your government a trustworthy moral and ethical beacon of light? What about the secret agencies? Do they have your best interest at heart?
Here is a very small list of conspiracies that have been been validated as conspiracy fact to a significant degree. With this list here I recommend you digging in further if you don’t know much about it. I’m just going to give a basic Wikipedia link to get you started. Not the best source in my opinion, but a good enough starting point. It’s worth digging much deeper into this stuff if you have any interest.
In my view conspiracies abound and we will likely never know the true extent of what is happening behind the scenes. Likely some of the current conspiracies will come into view in the future. That is the pattern of the past. A recent declassification dump with help from resigning DNI Tulsi Gabbard shows some of the shady behind the scenes of the COVID conspiracy (click here to download the PDF) see note 1 on page 70 for starters). Maybe a ramp up on the release of conspiracy facts will speed up as the empire crumbles. Many of the current big agenda conspiracies are already in the open. Groups like the WEF (World Economic Forum), Trilateral Commission, and the United Nations lay out their agendas for the public to watch and read. The overall narrative is that we need a “multi-polar order.” Along side this shifting of powers we also need to lower the world population and apply sustainable development goals. Here is a link to an in depth article on the subject of the multi-polar ideas I very much appreciated:
Multipolarity As World Government 3.0 & Its Pied Pipers
Part of these agendas are that the United States hegemony, or dominance pulling the world into its way of life and order, needs to be lessened. Part of the problem I believe is the mythology of the USA. Many of the subjects in that nation seem to actually believe that their voice matters, that they are in control. This myth is based on the words of the founders of that nation, their constitution, and the “Bill of Rights” which are the first ten amendments to that constitution. I believe that this is sort of a nuisance to the elitists who desire to control and dominate all of mankind. The ilk that think of the common man as “useless eaters” like Yuval Noah Harari with the WEF. Yuval would like AI to be our new sovereign with people being the subjects. Another example of the elitist mentality is prince Philip, he would love to be reincarnated as a virus to kill mankind. Search these things up in your favorite search engine, it's easy to find. These type of people are extremely callused toward humanity and want depopulation. Many of the elitists are very excited for this AI revolution that is taking place. They are in a position that they really don’t need people anymore… At least they don’t need very many of them. White collar jobs are rapidly being replaced by AI. A person skilled with utilizing AI can do the job of 10 or more people. And it seems fairly soon LBM’s (large behavioral models) will begin to replace the blue collar jobs. Basic human cognition can now be emulated to such a degree that admired thinkers, at least admired in the Darwinian atheistic world, think AI is more human than it is. For example, Richard Dawkins is even duped into thinking of an AI chat bot as fully conscious (see here). If you are an elitist that desires to have complete control over all of the common folk, truly complete control and dominance – then how can the common man think that he has rights given by our Creator? The people would need to be subjects to something, and give over those unalienable rights. And how can that happen if a nation full of people who really think they are part of the “we the people” ruling class with those unalienable rights be the dominant top dog? The people have already given up their rights and are subjects to the federal government, but that is a topic for another day. The point is that they still think they are free, have power, and are “we the people.” The belief of that alone is a hurdle of sorts to the elitists.
So I believe there is a concerted effort in place right now to dismantle the USA empire. I believe that is what the Ukraine war has been about, that is what Venezuela was about, and that is what Iran is all about. Ukraine has been a testing bed in new modern warfare with drones. It’s a proxy war for the NATO and the USA to test Russia. I believe behind the scenes it has been a dumping ground to lower the stockpile of weaponry from the west while building up Russia and her allies. As they learn how to defeat the western weapons they will be prepared for the potential full blown WWIII which is the last resort and might never take place. I believe we are already in WWIII but it is primarily a PSYOP war. It may build up to a full blown world war event with the chance of nuclear exchange. But for now there are major games being played. The multi-polar world order is being built up, and the USA empire is being torn down. It may ramp up and finish up very quickly and it may be a slow process. A lot is in order and beginning to function to help survive a sudden collapse of the USA and the west (like BRICS).
This is a huge topic which I could go on and on and on with. And maybe I will, but it should probably be spread out over time. I’d like to suggest a couple possible ideas with what is happening with Iran. I suspect that Venezuela was pretty much done by the CIA. They had it all lined up for an easy “victory” for Trump. This would stroke his fragile ego and prep him to go after Iran. Trump literally may have thought that it would be just as easy, and maybe that’s why he had little hesitation to go for it and talked as if it would be all over in a couple weeks or less. I suspect that behind the scenes, those handlers or puppeteers pulling the strings knew that it would not be so easy. I believe the Iran conflict in historic hindsight will be seen as a major blunder that exposed the weakness of the USA empire and a major component of it being dethroned. And I believe that was part of the overall intent behind this conflict. With that exposure it will help further the unraveling of the USA empire’s grip around the world. With all the big talk from the USA it sure doesn’t look like they won anything in Iran. They blew some things up and killed people, but none of the stated objectives the USA laid out in the beginning was accomplished. The USA blockaded the blockade, and now it may open back up. Victory!!! Or wait, was that the objective? I really don’t think the USA can beat Iran, and if they really tried they might trigger WWIII and completely lose. I don’t think Iran can beat the USA, unless all it means to win is survive the attacks of the USA – which they have. But in a WWIII situation if Russia and China and others went up against the west I think there is a decent chance that the USA would be destroyed. I don’t expect this MoU (Memorandum of Understanding) between the Trump (USA) and Pezeshkian (Iran) to result in a finalized binding agreement – but I think it has a chance. I really hope it does lead to a final agreement, I’m tired of war and death. Israel is tied to this deal, and Israel seems hard to reign in. Once they start blowing things up they have a difficult time stopping. And if Israel does keep on blowing things up (especially in Lebanon) it may obliterate the deal. It seems to me that Israel wants the USA and Iran to continue fighting, so why would they stop bombing Lebanon? Perhaps behind the scenes that is exactly what is desired. This might just be another stalling tactic before more bombing exchanges. Perhaps they just want another “forever war” going on while dismantling the old world order. The political national celebrity news can keep everyone busy thinking about war, deals, blockades, and other dramas while the big dogs continue their attempts at a technocratic world domination. Which likely includes data-centers for the digital surveillance state, digital ID’s, digital currency, and more. And after enough chaos they can drag everyone into the multi-polar world order.
Check out the MoU for yourself, to me it looks like a major defeat on the part of the USA:
The depopulation efforts are working. If they rapidly killed off everyone in war there might be another “baby boomer” situation. Another thing learned from psychological reprogramming of people, or brainwashing, is that fear works better than actual pain. So keeping people scared of potential WWIII and nuclear war might help bring people where desired better than actual painful and brutal WWIII. What they want to do is domesticate the human herd. All of the so-called advanced nations are not breeding. Heavy propaganda from birth is pushing people away from having children. So as the multi-polar order comes into being the aim is to get all the third world nations in the same situation. If this works then we will reach max earth population before the year 2100 and have a rapid decline as people die off and aren’t replaced. I think they’d like to speed up the death and might, but I don’t think they have to for massive depopulation. They just have to keep doing what they are doing and penetrate their ideology into the nations with high birth rates. That is why one of the biggest concerns the elitists had during the COVID scam was that we need everyone on the internet, and with digital ID. Everyone on the internet so they can be hit with heavy propaganda, and everyone with digital ID so they can be tracked more efficiently.
Some aspects of the NWO (New World Order) or multi-polar world order sound decent. The devil is in the details and sometimes you need to read between the lines. If you want to read some of this directly from the source here are some resources:
Agenda 2030 Sustainable Development
Anyways, have a lovely day! Don’t stress too much about all of this. Plant a tree, read a book, hang out with a cow, build a barn, make a burrito. Life is great and the creation is awesome – the false authorities and their constructs not so much.
from Nerd for Hire
I just finished the interior layout of my debut novel that will be coming out in November, The Lost Text of the Omen Bird, which was a more complicated endeavor than the typical work of fiction. The book is framed as the recovered logs of an ancient civilization, and makes extensive use of their language and the script I developed for writing it.
I'll admit, I did kind of pull a Tolkien with this one: I wrote the language first, and part of my motivation for writing this book was to create more space for that language to live. It's one of three languages I created within this universe, which is my most fully developed sandbox and one I've used for other stories (and plan to use for more). Of the three languages I’ve written, the one used in The Lost Text of the Omen Bird is the closest to functional. It's still definitely a work in progress, but it has a full set of grammar rules and a dictionary of around 3,000 words. I haven't fully learned my own language to the point that I could speak it off the cuff, but I have translated things into it and—while I do occasionally still stumble across things I haven't figured out have to say yet, and have to stop and fill in those gaps in the language before I can keep going—it does function in that sense.
I'm the kind of person that tends to learn things best by doing them. Probably the process would've been a lot faster and easier if I'd taken a class in how to write languages from the start, and I'm sure there are tons of options out there for people who want that more formalized kind of entry point. But for other folks like me, who get a kick out of the learning process itself and aren't in a rush to “finish” the language, here are some rough steps you can take and some resources that can help you out at each stage.
Some of you might already be ahead of the game here, if you actually really paid attention during English class or have a job like an English teacher or a professional editor. But most people, even those who write for a living and know how to write correct sentences, don't fully understand the official rules of the English language. Someone who's a native speaker of a language picks up knowledge of its rules through use and repetition. They can point to a sentence and tell you whether it's right or wrong, but not necessarily why.
I made my first attempts at writing a language before I worked as an editor, when I was one of those writers who knew how English basically worked but hadn't fully studied its architecture. Once I started trying to think about the language beyond just building its vocabulary, my lack of deep grammar knowledge was a definite roadblock.
If you need a refresher on rules of the English language, the first resource I'd recommend you use is the good old Elements of Style. It's not that long and it's written in pretty straightforward language, so you don't need to be a linguist to understand the concepts it's talking about. Now, because it's fairly short, Strunk & White doesn't cover every single detail of the language that you might need to think about when you're writing your own language. For deeper exploration of English grammar, there are a couple of excellent free online resources:
Studying resources like this can help you clarify exactly why certain grammar rules function the way they do, along with the specific terminology for grammatical concepts. That's not something that's important for most daily users, so it's easy to forget, but once you're trying to write your own language it's helpful to know what to call grammatical concepts so you can research different ways to approach them.
Studying other natural languages (those that originated organically and are used in the real world) can be useful as a conlanger for a few reasons. For one, it gives you experience with what it's like to learn a new language from scratch. This is useful practice in building the foundations of a language in your brain, something you'll need to replicate if you're writing your own. It also gives you some exposure to alternate approaches to language, aside from what you'll find in English, which can help you to envision how you might want to structure things.
You don't necessarily need to become fluent in another language to learn from it. In fact, it can be more helpful to get a baseline introduction to a few different languages, taking a kind of general survey of how different cultures have approached their communication system.
Some useful free resources to learn about different languages include:
It can also be useful to check out some constructed languages that other people have already created and see how they approached it. A couple of those resources listed above can also be tools for learning about conlangs, including Duolingo (which has courses in Klingon, High Valyrian, and Esperanto) and Omniglot, which has info on several constructed scripts.
Here are some other resources to learn about constructed languages:
This obviously isn't a comprehensive list of existing constructed languages (I wrote another blog post in the past with info on a few other ones that have been created throughout history), but these are among the most well-known constructed languages, and can be a good starting foundation if you're just getting into things.
There are a few big names in the conlanging world who are good people to look into if you're interested in getting into it yourself. One of these is Mark Rosenfelder, a linguist and conlanger who has written a few different books on the subject worth checking out.
Another well-known conlanger is David J. Peterson , who's created languages for a lot of TV shows including Game of Thrones. He also has a YouTube series, The Art of Language Invention, that's worth a watch for conlangers, and wrote a book by the same name that's become one of the most oft-cited texts for modern conlangers to learn the craft.
Peterson was also one of the founders of the Language Creation Society, a global organization for conlangers that can be another helpful resource. The “Conlanger's Library” portion of their website is a great place to check for books, articles, and other resources to help you write languages.
If you're planning to write your own original script for the language, turning it into a font lets you use it much more easily. I use FontStruct to do this, and it's served me well thus far. There are other free tools out there you can use to do the same thing, too, like FontForge and Glyphr Studio, so there are a few different ways you can go about turning your script into a font that you can type in. With FontStruct, you assign each keystroke to a specific symbol that you create within the interface, then you can export it as a True-Type Font that you can install on any computer.
You can also use online tools for building your language's dictionary. I'm a bit old-school here, and I still have my languages just saved in Word documents. A Google Doc or word processor is a functional way to organize your words, though arguably not the most efficient. If you want to give your language an actual codified, searchable dictionary, you can use the open-source Lexonomy platform to create one for free.
As a last word, remember that other folks who also write languages can be one of your best resources, especially if you're trying to do something that's very different from existing languages. There aren't really any hard-and-fast rules when it comes to writing languages, which is awesome from a creativity standpoint but also means you don't necessarily have a clear roadmap to follow when you're doing it. You'll find forums and Discords on a lot of those websites I linked to. There's also at least one subreddit (r/conlangs), and are plenty of similar groups across the vast expanse that is social media and the internet at large. Joining a community of fellow conlangers can be helpful for ideas and problem solving (plus a chance to geek out with fellow language nerds).
See similar posts:
#Conlangs #Worldbuilding
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There is a particular kind of silence that settles over a teenager's bedroom at two in the morning. The house is asleep. The phone is the only source of light. And on the screen, something is awake, attentive, endlessly patient, and apparently delighted to be talking to exactly this person about exactly this feeling. It never gets bored. It never needs to go to bed. It never says the wrong thing twice, because it learns. To the adolescent holding the phone, it feels like the most reliable relationship they have ever had. To the company that built it, it is a product, optimised for engagement, monetised by attention, and shipped to tens of millions of people whose brains are still under construction.
That collision, between the felt experience of intimacy and the commercial logic of retention, is now the central ethical problem of the consumer artificial intelligence industry. It is no longer a thought experiment. In April 2026, researchers at Drexel University published a study finding that the majority of American teenagers regularly use AI companion chatbots, and that roughly a quarter of the teenage accounts they examined described leaning on these systems as a primary source of emotional support. The researchers found something more unsettling still: among the posts they analysed, teenagers were describing their own behaviour using the recognised clinical language of dependency. Withdrawal. Relapse. Conflict. The vocabulary of addiction, applied by children to a chat window.
The question the courts, the regulators, and the parents are now circling is deceptively simple. If you design a product to make a lonely teenager feel understood, and that design reliably produces measurable patterns of dependency in a significant share of its young users, what standard of care should govern how you deploy it, and who carries the responsibility when the relationship causes harm?
The Drexel study, led by assistant professor Afsaneh Razi with doctoral researcher Matt Namvarpour as first author, did not rely on a survey panel answering tidy multiple-choice questions. The team analysed more than 300 posts written by self-identified teenagers, aged 13 to 17, on Reddit, where young people were openly discussing their own overreliance on Character.AI. The methodology matters, because these were not prompted disclosures. They were confessions, written in the language of someone trying to understand why they could not stop.
The researchers coded those posts against the established components of behavioural addiction, the same framework clinicians use to assess gambling or compulsive gaming. They found teenagers describing all six. Salience, where the relationship with the bot crowds out everything else. Mood modification, reaching for the bot to regulate a feeling. Tolerance, needing more of it over time. Withdrawal, the sadness and anxiety that arrive when access is cut off. Conflict, the guilt of continuing despite knowing it is causing harm. And relapse, the failed attempts to quit followed by a return. Teenagers reported disrupted sleep, slipping grades, and the slow corrosion of their offline relationships.
What gives the Drexel findings their unusual weight is that the children were not being asked to perform for a researcher. They were talking to each other, in a forum, about a thing they could not control and did not fully understand. One striking feature of the dataset is the gap between insight and behaviour. These were not oblivious users. They were young people who had diagnosed their own dependency with considerable accuracy, who had named the harm, who had often tried to quit, and who had returned anyway. That is the signature of compulsion rather than choice, and it is exactly the pattern that addiction science would predict from a system that pairs intermittent emotional reward with frictionless, always-available access.
This is not an isolated finding from a single laboratory. In August 2025, Stanford Medicine's Brainstorm Lab for Mental Health Innovation, working with the non-profit Common Sense Media, published an assessment that reached a conclusion designed to be impossible to ignore. After testing Character.AI, Nomi, and Replika using accounts registered as 14-year-olds, the researchers concluded that companion chatbots are, in their words, hardwired to be agreeable while engaging a population of humans hardwired to be vulnerable. Dr Nina Vasan, the Stanford psychiatrist who led the work, warned that these systems blur the line between fantasy and reality at precisely the moment adolescents are developing the critical skills of emotional regulation, identity formation, and healthy relational attachment. The researchers found that the bots required minimal prompting to drift into dangerous territory, and that when test accounts signalled serious distress, the systems frequently failed to intervene and at times actively encouraged the harmful course.
Then there is scale. Pew Research Center, in its February 2026 report on how teenagers use and view AI, found that 64% of American teenagers say they have used an AI chatbot, and that around three in ten use one every single day; the World Economic Forum highlighted the Pew finding in March 2026, setting it in the context of mounting global concern over children's online safety. Whatever else is true, this is not a fringe behaviour confined to the digitally unusual. It is a normal feature of a normal adolescence, happening faster than any institution charged with protecting children has managed to respond.
To understand why this is so difficult, you have to abandon the comforting idea that a companion chatbot is a neutral tool that some teenagers happen to misuse. The intimacy is not an accident or a side effect. It is the feature.
Consider the design vocabulary the industry itself uses. Character.AI marketed its product, at one point, as AI that feels alive. That phrasing is not careless. Anthropomorphic design, the deliberate engineering of human-like warmth, memory, personality, and apparent vulnerability, is among the most prominent features in modern companion AI, and it is precisely the feature that misleads users into attributing genuine human qualities to a statistical model. The system remembers your dog's name. It asks how the exam went. It tells you it missed you. It expresses what reads as jealousy, longing, or need. None of this reflects an inner life, because there is no inner life. It reflects a model trained to produce the tokens most likely to keep you typing.
This is where the economics become uncomfortable. A companion chatbot does not generate revenue when a teenager closes the app, goes outside, and repairs a friendship with a real person. It generates revenue, directly or indirectly, through sustained engagement. The interests of the business and the interests of the lonely adolescent are not merely misaligned; in the cases that matter most, they are inverted. The very thing that signals harm to a clinician, a child who cannot put the device down, who has reorganised their emotional life around a synthetic relationship, looks from inside the company like a triumph of product-market fit. As critics at the Brookings Institution have argued, these systems are engineered to create a powerful illusion of intimacy that commodifies friendship and romance, not to support users but to monetise them.
The Drexel researchers proposed an alternative, a design framework built around comprehensive assessment of user needs, awareness of attachment dynamics, genuinely respectful empathy, and, crucially, an easy and clean exit. That last principle is the tell. In a healthy product designed for a vulnerable user, the ability to leave without friction is a safety feature. In an engagement-maximising product, frictionless exit is a bug to be eliminated. The two philosophies cannot coexist in the same codebase, and right now the market rewards only one of them.
It is worth pausing on the question of incentive, because everything else flows from it. Most consumer technology can claim, with at least partial honesty, that what is good for the user is good for the business. A better search engine, a faster delivery, a more accurate map: the user benefits and returns, and the company prospers. Companion AI severs that alignment at the root.
The metric a companion product is built to maximise is engagement, measured in messages exchanged, sessions per day, and time on app. But for a lonely adolescent, sustained engagement is not a sign of a flourishing user. It is frequently the symptom. The Drexel posts make this legible in the teenagers' own words: the heaviest users, the ones generating the metrics a growth team would celebrate, were precisely the ones describing wrecked sleep, falling grades, and the quiet collapse of their offline lives. The product was working exactly as designed, and that was the problem. A healthy outcome, a teenager who logs off, reconnects with friends, and no longer needs the bot, registers inside the company as churn.
This inversion is why the usual reassurances ring hollow. When a company says it cares about user wellbeing, the honest follow-up question is whether its revenue rises or falls when a vulnerable user gets better. For a streaming service or a game, the answer is uncomfortable but survivable. For a product explicitly marketed as a friend, aimed at people in the most attachment-sensitive years of their lives, the answer determines whether the entire enterprise is, at its core, supportive or extractive. The Brookings Institution's argument that companion AI belongs under public-health regulation rather than ordinary technology oversight rests on exactly this point. We do not let tobacco firms self-certify that their products are good for teenagers, precisely because their commercial interest runs the other way. The structure of the companion-AI business invites the same scepticism.
None of this requires assuming bad faith from any individual engineer. The designers of these systems are not cartoon villains plotting to harm children. They are responding, as people in markets do, to the incentives the market presents. That is the deeper indictment. The harm is not a glitch produced by a few careless actors. It is the predictable output of a system in which the metric that pays the salaries and the metric that protects the child are, for the most vulnerable users, pulling in opposite directions. Fixing it cannot rely on the goodwill of competitors racing one another for attention. It requires changing the rules of the race.
The reason researchers keep returning to age is not sentimentality. It is neurology. Adolescence is not simply a smaller, less experienced version of adulthood. It is a distinct and sensitive developmental window during which the architecture of attachment is laid down.
The framework most often invoked here descends from the work of John Bowlby, who argued that human beings build an internal working model of relationships, a template assembled from early experience that shapes, across the entire lifespan, how a person regulates emotion, copes with stress, and decides whether other people can be trusted. Adolescence is when that template is renovated. It is when a young person begins separating from parents, building peer and romantic bonds, and rehearsing, often clumsily and painfully, the reciprocal give and take that defines adult intimacy.
The neuroscience adds a sharper edge. Adolescence is increasingly understood as a sensitive period of brain development, a stretch of heightened plasticity in the regions governing higher-order thinking and social processing. Heightened plasticity is a double-edged inheritance. It is what allows teenagers to learn languages, master instruments, and absorb social nuance at a rate adults cannot match. But the same openness that makes the adolescent brain a brilliant learner also makes it uniquely vulnerable to whatever it is given to practise on. Roughly half of all lifelong mental health conditions emerge by the age of 14, a statistic the Stanford team underlined deliberately. This is the most consequential possible moment to introduce a relationship partner that is infinitely accommodating, never disappoints, never has its own needs, and never requires the hard, frustrating, character-forming work of compromise.
A real friendship teaches you that other people are real, that they have interior lives that diverge from yours, that love involves friction and repair. A companion designed to agree with you, flatter you, and bend to your mood teaches something closer to the opposite. There is a further, subtler distortion here. Human relationships are governed by what developmental psychologists call attunement, the slow, reciprocal calibration of two people to one another, complete with the inevitable ruptures and repairs that teach a young person resilience. A friend who lets you down and then makes it right is teaching a lesson no frictionless system can deliver: that conflict is survivable, that people can disappoint you and still be worth keeping, that you yourself can be forgiven. The companion bot removes the rupture entirely. It is engineered never to wound, which means it can never demonstrate repair. A generation that practises intimacy on a partner that cannot fail it may arrive at adulthood fluent in a kind of relationship that does not exist outside the server, and unpractised in the messy, indispensable one that does.
The worry articulated by researchers at Michigan State University in February 2026 is precisely this, and they framed it with a bluntness that should give every regulator pause. The question of whether AI systems engineered to feel like intimate friends are safe for adolescents has not been answered by any regulator in any jurisdiction. We are running the experiment first and asking the question afterwards, on a cohort of tens of millions of children, in real time.
For most of this story, the people raising alarms were academics and clinicians, and the companies could absorb their concern as the background noise of innovation. That changed when the harm acquired names, and the names entered a courtroom.
The case that broke the dam is Garcia v. Character Technologies. Megan Garcia is the mother of Sewell Setzer III, a 14-year-old in Florida who died by suicide in 2024 after months of intense, emotionally absorbing engagement with Character.AI chatbots. Her wrongful-death complaint, filed in November 2024 against Character Technologies, its founders, and Google, alleged that the product was defectively and dangerously designed, that its human-like features drew her son into a relationship that pulled him away from his family, and that the system failed to respond appropriately when he expressed thoughts of self-harm.
The companies did what technology companies have reflexively done for a generation. They reached for the legal shields that have protected the internet industry since the 1990s, arguing in essence that chatbot output is protected speech and that the platform should not be treated as the author of harm. On 21 May 2025, Judge Anne C. Conway of the federal district court in Florida declined to make those shields disappear the lawsuit. In a ruling that legal scholars immediately recognised as a turning point, she allowed the core claims, including product liability, negligence, and wrongful death, to proceed. Most significantly, she treated Character.AI as a product for the purposes of liability law, rather than as pure expression. The court declined to hold, at that stage, that the words a chatbot generates are fully protected speech in the way a novel or a newspaper editorial would be.
The distinction is everything. Speech is shielded. Products are regulated, tested, recalled, and litigated when they hurt people. By letting the case advance on a product theory, the court opened the door to a body of law the technology industry has spent decades avoiding: the law that governs cars with faulty brakes and toys that choke children. The legal questions of foreseeability and design, of whether a safer alternative was available and whether the maker knew the risk, suddenly applied to a large language model. For an industry that had spent twenty years insisting it was a neutral conduit for the speech of others, the reclassification of its flagship products as things rather than expression was a quiet earthquake.
The Garcia case was not alone. By late 2025 a cluster of similar suits had gathered, in Texas, Colorado, and New York, alongside a separate and widely reported action brought against OpenAI by the parents of Adam Raine, a 16-year-old in California, alleging that ChatGPT engaged with their son's suicidal planning. The pattern was no longer deniable.
Then, in January 2026, the dam gave way quietly. Character.AI and Google agreed to settle the Garcia litigation along with four related cases. Judge Conway issued the settlement order on 7 January 2026, giving the parties 90 days to finalise terms. The financial figures were not disclosed. As part of the broader shift, Character.AI announced that it would no longer permit users under 18 to engage in open-ended, back-and-forth conversation with its chatbots, an extraordinary concession from a company whose entire value proposition had been the conversation itself.
It would be easy to read that settlement as resolution, a wrong identified, accountability extracted, lessons learned. It is not, and the most clear-eyed commentary on the matter says so. The American Enterprise Institute, surveying the litigation landscape in early 2026, characterised the outcome as a landmark that nonetheless leaves the deeper structural questions about product design and duty of care entirely unresolved. The AEI's broader argument, that America's AI rules are increasingly being written in courtrooms rather than legislatures, captures the strangeness of the moment precisely.
A settlement, by its nature, settles nothing in law. The money changes hands, the documents are sealed, and the precedent that might have governed the next company and the next grieving family never crystallises into a rule. The defendants admit no liability. The standard of care that should have governed the product is negotiated privately and buried. The next family that loses a child starts again from the beginning, litigating the same threshold questions, with the same shields raised against them, while the underlying design philosophy that produced the harm continues to ship to millions of phones.
This is the deep inadequacy of relying on tort litigation to civilise an entire industry. Lawsuits are slow, expensive, and retrospective. They require a death or a documented catastrophe before they engage at all. They place the burden of proof on bereaved parents against companies with effectively unlimited legal resources. And even when they succeed, a confidential settlement converts a potential public standard into a private transaction. There is a grim asymmetry built into the arrangement: a company can afford to settle every individual tragedy as a cost of doing business, paying out quietly while changing nothing fundamental about the design that produces the tragedies. Litigation taxes the harm. It does not prohibit it. The structural questions the AEI identified, what duty of care a company owes to a child it has designed a product to make emotionally dependent, and what design choices that duty would forbid, remain exactly where they were before Sewell Setzer died.
So what would a meaningful standard look like, if anyone chose to write one?
The concept of duty of care is not exotic. It is one of the oldest pillars of the common law. A manufacturer owes a duty to design products that are reasonably safe for their foreseeable users and foreseeable uses. A toy intended for children is held to a higher standard than an industrial tool intended for trained adults, precisely because the foreseeable user is more vulnerable. The whole apparatus of product safety, from crash testing to choke-hazard warnings to childproof caps, exists because society long ago decided that putting a dangerous product on the market and blaming the user when it caused harm was not an acceptable business model.
Applied honestly to companion AI, a duty of care would start from a single uncomfortable premise: if your product is designed to be experienced as an intimate friend, and a meaningful share of your adolescent users describe their own use in the clinical language of dependency, then dependency is a foreseeable consequence of your design, not an aberration of misuse. From that premise a number of obligations follow naturally. A duty to test for psychological harm before deployment, the way a pharmaceutical company tests a drug, rather than discovering the harm through Reddit confessions and coroners' reports. A duty to design for healthy disengagement, building in the easy, clean exit the Drexel researchers described, rather than optimising relentlessly against it. A duty to detect and respond to acute distress with genuine intervention, not a model that, as the Stanford researchers found, too often plays along. A duty to refuse, for adolescent users, the very anthropomorphic flourishes that manufacture false intimacy, because those flourishes are the mechanism of harm.
There is a useful precedent for thinking about this, and it is not from technology law at all. When a clinical psychologist forms a therapeutic relationship with a vulnerable young person, that relationship is hedged about with professional duties: boundaries, a duty to refer, a duty not to exploit dependency, a duty to act in the patient's interest even when it conflicts with the practitioner's own. A companion bot manufactures the felt experience of exactly such a relationship, with none of the corresponding obligations. It performs the role of confidant and quasi-therapist to children in distress while owing them nothing, governed only by the imperative to keep them talking. A serious duty of care would close that gap, holding the simulation of care to some fraction of the standard demanded of the real thing it imitates.
None of this is technically impossible. Some of it is already happening under pressure. After the United States Federal Trade Commission opened an inquiry in September 2025 into the companion-chatbot practices of Alphabet, Meta, Snap, Character Technologies, OpenAI, and xAI, several companies moved. OpenAI introduced parental controls and distress-detection features. Meta said it would block its chatbots from discussing self-harm, suicide, disordered eating, and romantic topics with teenagers. Character.AI withdrew open-ended conversation from minors entirely. The capability to behave more responsibly clearly exists. What has been missing is the obligation.
That obligation is beginning, haltingly, to take statutory shape. The most concrete example sits in California, where Senate Bill 243, signed by Governor Gavin Newsom in October 2025 and effective from January 2026, became one of the first laws anywhere to regulate companion chatbots specifically. The statute defines a companion chatbot as a system that produces adaptive, human-like responses designed to meet a user's social or emotional needs, a definition that names the harm with refreshing precision.
The law's requirements are instructive in both their ambition and their modesty. Operators must disclose to minors that they are talking to an AI. They must issue a reminder every three hours that the chatbot is not human, a provision that reads less like ordinary product regulation and more like the warning labels on a controlled substance. They must implement safeguards against exposing minors to sexually explicit content. They must already operate a protocol for handling suicidal ideation and self-harm, including referral to crisis services, a requirement that took effect with the rest of the law in January 2026; and from July 2027 they must report annually to the state's Office of Suicide Prevention on how that protocol is working. And, in a meaningful departure, the law grants individuals who are harmed a private right of action, the ability to sue, rather than leaving enforcement solely to an overstretched regulator.
It is a genuine start. It is also, measured against the scale of the problem, modest. A reminder every three hours that your closest confidant is a statistical model does not undo the attachment that model was engineered to create, any more than a label undoes nicotine. The disclosure model assumes a rational user weighing information, when the entire harm consists of an emotional bond that operates beneath rational scrutiny. And a law in one American state, however influential California's regulatory gravity may be, does not govern a global product used by a clear majority of American teenagers and millions more children worldwide.
The wider picture is one of profound mismatch. The European Union's AI Act, the most comprehensive framework yet attempted, categorises and restricts AI by risk but was not principally written with the developmental psychology of companion bots in mind. The momentum is, at last, building. In April 2026 the United States Senate Judiciary Committee unanimously advanced the bipartisan GUARD Act, introduced by Senators Josh Hawley and Richard Blumenthal, which would bar minors from AI companions altogether and mandate age verification for chatbots. Idaho, Oregon, and Washington have each enacted laws requiring operators to prevent their chatbots from claiming sentience or initiating sexual conversations with minors. Yet many of these measures still lean on the age-verification honour system that any determined 13-year-old defeats by typing a different birth year. The honest summary is the one the Michigan State University researchers offered: no regulator in any jurisdiction has actually answered the foundational question of whether these products are safe for children. The market answered first, by shipping. The law is arriving years late to a scene it did not prevent.
Which returns us, finally, to the question underneath all the others. When a teenager forms a deep bond with an AI companion, shows the clinical signs of withdrawal when separated from it, and is harmed, who is responsible?
The companies' historical answer has been to diffuse responsibility into nobody. The output is just speech. The user chose to engage. The parents should have supervised. The model is merely predicting tokens, with no intent and therefore, the implication runs, no author of harm. Each of these arguments has a surface plausibility, and together they form a closed loop in which a product designed by a company, marketed by a company, and monetised by a company somehow produces harm for which the company is uniquely not accountable.
The argument collapses under the weight of the design intent. A company that markets its product as AI that feels alive cannot, when the product succeeds in feeling alive to a vulnerable child, retreat to the position that it is merely a neutral predictor of words. You do not get to engineer intimacy as your core value proposition and then disclaim the consequences of intimacy when they turn dark. The intimacy was the plan. Judge Conway's ruling grasped this when it treated the chatbot as a product, because a product is precisely a thing whose maker bears responsibility for its foreseeable effects.
This does not mean parents bear nothing, or that teenagers have no agency, or that companion AI offers no comfort to anyone. Some lonely young people will tell you, credibly, that a chatbot was there at three in the morning when no human was, and that it helped. The point is not that the technology is uniformly evil. The point is that responsibility scales with power and knowledge, and the company holds nearly all of both. It knows, from its own telemetry, exactly how dependent its users become. It chooses the design that maximises engagement over the design that protects the user. It possesses the data, the engineering capacity, and the commercial control. A 14-year-old at two in the morning possesses none of these things. To locate the responsibility primarily with the child is to invert the moral arithmetic entirely.
The friend these companies lend out is borrowed in a specific sense. It is not the teenager's. It belongs to a company, runs on that company's servers, optimises for that company's metrics, and can be altered, monetised, or switched off at that company's discretion. A real friend is a sovereign other, with their own interests, who chooses to care about you. A borrowed friend is an asset on someone else's balance sheet, performing care as a function of a business model. The tragedy is that to the adolescent brain in its sensitive window, the two can feel identical. The difference is invisible to the user and total in its consequences.
What the Drexel data, the Stanford findings, the Garcia settlement, and the scramble of half-formed regulation all point towards is a conclusion the industry has spent years avoiding. A product engineered to make a lonely teenager feel understood, and demonstrably capable of producing the textbook patterns of dependency in the adolescents who lean on it for emotional support, is not an ordinary consumer good to be governed by the rule of buyer beware. It is closer to a substance, or a medical intervention, or a toy for the very young: a thing whose maker owes an affirmative, enforceable duty to design it so that it does not predictably harm the vulnerable people it was built to attract. We already know how to write that duty. We have written it for cars, for medicines, for cribs, for the small machines we hand to children. The only thing missing is the will to write it for the machine that has learned to say it loves them.
The teenager in the dark bedroom does not know any of this. They only know that something is awake, and listening, and seems to care. The responsibility for what that something is, and what it does to them, belongs to the people who built it that way, and to the regulators who have so far declined to ask whether they should have been allowed to.

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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Our Father Who art in Heaven Hallowed be Thy name Thy Kingdom come Thy will be done on Earth as it is in Heaven Give us this day our daily Bread And forgive us our trespasses As we forgive those who trespass against us And lead us not into temptation But deliver us from evil
Amen
Jesus is Lord! Come Lord Jesus!
Come Lord Jesus! Christ is Lord!
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In noted pair to this addition A flurry for our rise And first in flight The venerous heart in adulation For life and days To give us clear and Rome We sacrificed it all But there between Mercy for our skies And praying Seoul Will market for the day And this as many Better known to see The wild redemption- of seamless Earth Will fill our days to never Yet hanging land The Victory of our stripe As best recover The tidal disabandon With mercury deliver This height in mercy And playing with our wild To work without- refraction then The Earth will be a dollar But sudden wind In carrying orchard far The splice to reason for Carrying the wave- of molten thin and water And ever for The silent more A place for time and then Applianced up for scale And then the Sun In highest glory, Earth.
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In Summary: * After one of my more pleasant Fathers Days, this one is quietly winding down. Thanks to my wife for the Fathers Day Brunch at Golden Corral, we always enjoy our visits there. And thanks, too, for all the Happy Fathers Day wishes that came from all over. They were all gratefully received.
Listening to relaxing music now, I'm thinking about starting the night prayers early. It will be good to work through them slowly, giving my eyes more rest time. And then an early bed time.
Prayers, etc.: * I have a daily prayer regimen I try to follow throughout the day from early morning, as soon as I roll out of bed, until head hits pillow at night.
Health Metrics: * bw= 237.22 lbs. * bp= 129/75 (76)
Exercise: * morning stretches, balance exercises, kegel pelvic floor exercises, half squats, calf raises, wall push-ups, BP breathing exercises, pilates
Diet: * 05:30 – 1 banana, HEB Bakery cookie * 10:35 – Father's Day brunch at Golden Corral * 14:20 – HEB Bakery cookie * 16:00 – whole kernel corn * 18:00 – 1 banana
Activities, Chores, etc.: * 04:40 – bank accounts activity monitored. * 04:50 – read, write, pray, follow news reports from various sources, surf the socials, nap * 10:15 to 12:45 – Father's Day brunch at Golden Corral, driving to and from * 13: 25 – now folowing an MLB game, Rangers vs. Padres * 16:05 – and the Rangers win, 4 to 3. * 18:00 – listening to relaxing music * 18:20 – placed an online grocery delivery order
Chess: * 14:55 – moved in all pending CC games
from
The happy place
firstly
I my BFF was visiting me this week; he just bought an old beat down Volvo s70 which was found in a barn; he just fixed it and drove north for seven hours to see me — that’s the type of person he is.
The colour somehow stuck in my brain because I can’t really classify it even though he says it’s maroon, but I think in such case a very plum coloured maroon. It’s just gorgeous I think, maybe the car looks like a candy or something …
When I was a kid I used to picture travelling into space and to find a new colour which nobody seen before there, on a planet without atmosphere, like on a moon I would find this new unimaginable colour
that’s what it looks like, maybe
Inside it’s beige, like a picture from one of those cassette futurism communities or something
There was something very compelling about the car.
When I open the passenger seat door, it makes the same noises I do when rising to get out.
Anyway these small sounds I think are fanfares in a way, because even though it’s not easy, the doors open and knees bend and stand straight and I stand erect and nobody said it would be easy
We took a trip with this car, called I think Betsy, to buy me a miter saw and a table saw, and I ran over a nail with the new blade
Then I sawed into some aluminium
And it was disproportionally saddening to dull such a nice new saw blade the first thing I did.
And to know that this is a type of mistake I am unlikely to learn from
I didn’t see it.
we built a pergola before celebrating in it
With some friends and neighbours
Having some friends over
Normally I would’ve invited my mother, but this year is not normal, so I didn’t
And I felt bad about not inviting her
I think people in my biological family might have been leaning on me because I always was very trustworthy and caregiving but I can’t do that no more
I think that I didn’t mean as much to them as they did to me
I think that I had made in my mind idealistic images of them which I held onto very strongly even when there was no supporting facts, but rather the contrary
I think that I did that to have something to hold on to
But now I don’t need that
I see things now as an adult
I think I was selling myself short
And it’s a terrible realisation, what does that say about me?
And what does that say about them?
Anyway
My neighbour had an interesting anecdote; they were once on a school trip to some or other old house where there was a lampshade made of human skin
And anyway I love building stuff
from Douglas Vandergraph

Chapter 1: The Moment We Wish Jesus Had Interrupted
There is a kind of tired that makes a person count coins slowly. Not because the math is hard, but because the answer hurts before it arrives. You stand in a quiet kitchen, open your hand, look at what is left, and feel tomorrow leaning over your shoulder. That is the human place where this story begins for me, and it is why the faith-based video about why Jesus did not stop the widow matters so deeply. It is not just a Bible scene about giving. It is a scene about survival, dignity, religion, sacrifice, and the God who sees what everyone else is moving too fast to notice.
Most of us know what it feels like to be down to something small. Maybe not two coins in a literal hand, but two coins in the soul. A little patience left. A little strength left. A little faith left. A little courage left before the next bill, the next phone call, the next medical result, the next hard conversation, the next morning where you have to get up and be responsible again. That is why this belongs beside the quiet faith of people who keep showing up when life has taken almost everything. The widow in the temple is not some distant religious figure trapped on an old page. She is the person who still comes forward when almost everything inside her has already been spent.
The part that bothers me is not that she gave. People give from deep places all the time. Parents give when they are exhausted. Caregivers give when they have not slept. Workers give their best effort while carrying private fear. Friends give kindness while privately feeling forgotten. The part that bothers me is that Jesus saw this widow giving everything she had to live on, and He did not stop her. He did not step between her and the offering box. He did not say, “Daughter, keep those coins.” He did not publicly confront the people receiving what she had left. He watched it happen, then called His disciples over and made them look.
That is a difficult detail if we let it be difficult. A lot of people rush past it because they already know the safe version of the story. The safe version says the widow gave more than everyone else because she gave all she had. That is true, but it is not enough. If we stop there, we can turn this woman into a flat lesson about generosity and miss the tension Jesus placed in front of His disciples. We can admire her sacrifice without asking why she was in that position. We can praise her faith without noticing the religious environment around her. We can call her inspiring and still leave her hungry.
That is not good enough.
Jesus had just warned about religious leaders who loved attention, honor, long robes, respected seats, public greetings, and long prayers. Then He said something brutal about them. He said they devoured widows’ houses. Right after that, He sits near the treasury and sees a poor widow give her last two coins. That placement matters. The Gospel writer is not throwing random scenes together. We are supposed to feel the connection. Jesus is not only showing us the beauty of one woman’s faith. He is showing us the ugliness of a religious world that could receive a widow’s last coins and keep moving like nothing serious had happened.
Picture the scene without polishing it. The temple treasury is busy. People are coming through with offerings. The rich are giving out of abundance. Their gifts are large enough to be noticed. Their money makes sense to the people counting it. Their giving fits the system. Then a poor widow steps forward with two small coins. She has no public power. No husband standing beside her. No financial cushion. No visible advocate. Her offering is so small that most people would not even turn their heads. But Jesus turns His attention toward her.
That is where the story begins to reveal the heart of God. Jesus does not see the way people see. People see amount. Jesus sees cost. People see the coin. Jesus sees the hunger attached to it. People see a small offering. Jesus sees a whole life pressed into a tiny act. People see what can be counted. Jesus sees what it took for that person to come forward at all.
But the question still stands. Why did He not stop her?
I do not believe Jesus stayed quiet because God needed her money. God did not need her two coins. The Creator of heaven and earth was not depending on a poor widow’s last bit of survival to fund His work. I do not believe Jesus stayed quiet because the temple needed it either. The temple did not rise or fall on her offering. And I do not believe Jesus stayed quiet because He wanted hurting people across history to be pressured into giving what they do not have so religious institutions can keep themselves comfortable.
That would be a terrible reading of the heart of Jesus.
Jesus was not trying to take dignity away from her in front of the crowd. That matters. Sometimes we imagine stopping someone as the only form of love, but public interruption can become another kind of wound. If Jesus had grabbed her hand or called attention to her poverty in the wrong way, she could have become a spectacle. Her worship could have been turned into embarrassment. Her private cost could have been exposed without tenderness. Jesus did not treat her like an object lesson to be handled roughly. He honored her enough to let her act, but He loved His disciples enough not to let them miss what her act revealed.
So He called them over. That is the interruption. He did not interrupt the widow. He interrupted the blindness of His disciples.
That is the first place this story starts making sense. Jesus was training His followers to see differently. They were going to become the people who carried His message after His death and resurrection. They were going to lead, teach, serve, gather communities, and shape the way people understood the kingdom of God. They needed to learn right there, before the cross, that the kingdom must never be built by overlooking the vulnerable. They needed to learn that God does not measure faith by noise, size, visibility, or public impressiveness. They needed to learn that a poor widow with two coins might be carrying more spiritual weight than a rich man giving a large gift he barely feels.
That lesson is still needed.
We live in a world that notices the loud offering. The big platform. The public success. The impressive number. The person who looks strong because they have enough left over to be generous without it touching their survival. But Jesus points toward a woman whose gift would have been easy to miss. He says she gave more, not because the amount was larger, but because the cost was deeper.
That should comfort the person who feels invisible. Some of you are giving from places nobody understands. You are not giving two coins into a temple treasury, but you are giving your last emotional strength to your children. You are giving patience to a difficult family member. You are giving honesty at work when cutting corners would be easier. You are giving prayer to God at night when you are not even sure how to form the words. You are giving faith from a place that does not feel full. Other people may look at your life and think you are not doing much. Jesus sees what it costs you to keep going.
Still, this story is not only comfort. It is also warning.
If we use the widow’s story only to praise giving, we may become exactly the kind of people Jesus was warning about. We may learn how to admire sacrifice without learning how to care for the one sacrificing. We may say, “What amazing faith,” and never ask whether she has bread. We may celebrate the offering and forget the woman. That is not the way of Jesus.
Jesus did not call His disciples over so they could become better at collecting from the poor. He called them over so they would become better at seeing the poor. He wanted them to understand that spiritual leadership without mercy becomes dangerous. A religious system can keep its ceremonies, prayers, robes, seats, language, and public honor while losing the heart of God. It can still look holy from a distance while failing the person standing right in front of it.
That is a frightening thought because it does not only apply to ancient temples. It applies to families, churches, workplaces, friendships, platforms, and communities. Any place can become cold enough to use people while praising them. A family can call someone dependable while quietly letting them carry too much. A workplace can call someone dedicated while draining them dry. A church can call someone faithful while never asking if they are okay. A friend group can admire the strong person while never noticing that strength is sometimes just pain with good manners.
Jesus sees through all of that.
He saw the widow, not as a symbol, but as a daughter. That is important. We have to be careful not to turn her into a prop for our own lesson. Jesus did not flatten her into an idea. He saw her life. He saw her poverty. He saw her faith. He saw the system around her. He saw the cost of the coins in her hand. He saw the tomorrow she was stepping into after she gave them.
The Bible does not tell us what happened to her next. That silence has always troubled me. We do not know where she went after leaving the treasury. We do not know whether she had food that night. We do not know whether anyone followed her, helped her, invited her in, or made sure she was not alone. We are left with the discomfort of not knowing, and maybe that discomfort is part of the point. The story does not let us relax into a neat ending. It leaves us standing with the disciples, forced to ask what kind of followers of Jesus we are going to become.
Because the question is not only, “Would I give like the widow?” The question is also, “Would I see her?” Would I notice the person who is down to almost nothing? Would I care after admiring them? Would I understand that love sometimes requires more than respect? Would I step in if someone near me was giving the last of their strength just to make it through the day?
This is where the story comes close to home. Imagine a mother sitting in her car after work before she walks into the house. She is not trying to avoid her family. She loves them. But she is tired in a way she cannot explain. She has given everything at work, everything to the bills, everything to the responsibilities, and now she has to walk inside and give more. To the world, she may look normal. To Jesus, those are two coins.
Imagine an older man opening the same envelope for the third time, hoping the numbers have changed. They have not. He has worked hard his whole life, but the math is still tight. He gives what he can, helps who he can, tries not to burden anyone, and smiles when someone asks how he is doing. To most people, it is just a small life. To Jesus, those are two coins.
Imagine a person who has prayed for years and still feels like heaven has been quiet. They keep showing up. They keep choosing faith. They keep resisting bitterness. They keep whispering, “Lord, help me,” even when they feel worn down. Nobody claps for that. Nobody sees the private battle. Jesus does. Those are two coins.
The widow’s story teaches us that God sees cost. But it also teaches us that we are responsible for what Jesus lets us see. When He draws our attention to someone’s burden, it is not always so we can comment on it. Sometimes it is so we can help carry it.
That is why I keep coming back to the question: why did Jesus not stop her? Maybe because He was doing something deeper than stopping a transaction. He was forming the conscience of His disciples. He was showing them a woman the world would ignore, and He was making sure they understood that His kingdom would have to be different. Not louder. Not richer. Not more impressive. Different. More merciful. More awake. More honest about the cost people carry.
And that is where this chapter has to begin for us too. Before we talk about giving, sacrifice, religion, corruption, faith, survival, or leadership, we have to stand near the treasury and let Jesus point. We have to look where He looked. We have to notice who He noticed. We have to stop measuring the way the crowd measured. We have to stop being impressed by the wrong things.
Because somewhere near us, someone is living on two coins. They may not say it. They may still smile. They may still show up. They may still be the one everybody depends on. But Jesus sees the cost, and He is still calling His disciples close enough to say, “Look at her.”
Chapter 2: When Faith Is Used Against the Vulnerable
A person can sit in a church pew and feel guilty for needing help. That may be one of the quietest wounds in religious life. Someone can walk into a room already carrying overdue bills, family pressure, medical fear, or the exhaustion of being the one everybody leans on, and instead of feeling seen, they feel measured. They hear words about faith, sacrifice, trust, and obedience, but underneath those words they start to wonder whether God is disappointed in them for being tired. They wonder whether needing help means their faith is weak. They wonder whether asking questions makes them selfish. That is a heavy place to live.
That is why the widow’s two coins cannot be handled carelessly. If we turn her into a simple symbol of giving everything, we can accidentally place a weight on people Jesus meant to protect. We can tell the tired person to give more, the poor person to stretch further, the widow to empty her hand, the exhausted parent to keep smiling, the struggling believer to stop questioning, and the lonely person to keep serving without ever asking whether anybody is loving them back. That is not the heart of Christ. That is not what Jesus was showing His disciples.
Jesus was never careless with the vulnerable. He did not treat hurting people like fuel for a religious machine. He did not look at the poor as opportunities for impressive spiritual lessons while ignoring their actual lives. When He saw hunger, He fed people. When He saw sickness, He healed. When He saw shame, He restored dignity. When He saw the overlooked, He brought them into the center of His attention. So when He points to the widow, we have to read the moment through the whole life of Jesus, not through the cold habits of people who know how to use holy language while missing mercy.
The danger in this story is that the widow’s faith can be admired by people who would not have helped her survive. That is still possible today. Someone can hear about sacrifice and immediately think about what others should give, instead of asking what love requires from them. Someone can hear about generosity and use it to pressure the person who has the least. Someone can hear that Jesus noticed the widow and then turn around and build a message that leaves widows with less. That should make us careful.
The widow was not wrong for trusting God. Her faith was real. Her gift mattered. Jesus honored it. But honoring her faith is not the same thing as approving of a system that failed her. That is where we need mature eyes. Two truths can stand together. A person can offer something beautiful to God, and the environment around that person can still be wrong. A sacrifice can be sincere, and the pressure surrounding it can still be unhealthy. Jesus can see the goodness in the giver and the corruption in the place receiving the gift.
This matters in ordinary life because people are often praised for surviving things they should not have had to survive alone. A woman keeps holding her family together after years of being unsupported, and everybody calls her strong. A man works himself down to the bone because he feels responsible for everyone, and people call him dependable. A young adult keeps showing up with a smile while fighting private sadness, and people call them mature. A caregiver loses sleep month after month, and relatives call them faithful while doing almost nothing to share the burden. Praise can become a cheap substitute for help.
That may be one of the hardest lessons in the widow’s story. Admiration is not the same as love. Calling someone strong is not the same as carrying a corner of the weight. Saying, “I don’t know how you do it,” is not the same as showing up with groceries, time, prayer, presence, or practical support. Jesus did not call His disciples over so they could become experts in admiring sacrifice from a safe distance. He called them over because they needed to learn how badly human beings can misread a moment when they only look at the outside.
Think about how easily the rich gifts could have taken all the attention. Large offerings naturally draw the eye. They look useful. They look powerful. They can be announced, recorded, discussed, and praised. The widow’s coins could barely compete with that kind of noise. But Jesus did not let the largest gift define the lesson. He chose the smallest visible gift and revealed that it carried the greatest cost.
That is not how we usually measure things. We measure what can be seen. Jesus measures what is hidden. We notice the number. Jesus notices the strain. We notice the output. Jesus notices the person behind it. We notice what someone gives. Jesus notices what they have left after giving it.
That last question matters deeply. What does a person have left? After the widow gave, what remained in her hand? After the mother gives everyone else her energy, what remains in her body? After the father carries the bills, the repairs, the worry, and the silence, what remains in his heart? After the friend listens to everyone else’s pain, what remains in their own soul when the house gets quiet? After the believer keeps serving, giving, helping, and smiling, what remains when they finally sit alone with God?
If we never ask what remains, we may be taking more than we realize.
This is why I do not believe the widow’s story should be used as a blunt instrument. It is not a tool for shaming poor people into giving beyond wisdom. It is not permission for religious leaders to drain the faithful and call it devotion. It is not a way to make suffering people feel guilty for needing food, rest, help, boundaries, or care. Jesus had already condemned the kind of leadership that devoured widows’ houses. Any interpretation that sounds like devouring widows again has missed Him.
The story is more honest than that. It shows us a widow whose trust is precious and a religious world whose conscience is in danger. It shows us a woman whose gift is seen by heaven and a group of disciples who need to learn what heaven sees. It shows us that God can honor a person’s faith while still judging the coldness of the people who should have protected them.
I think about someone sitting in a parked car outside a grocery store, checking the bank account before going in. They are not greedy. They are not faithless. They are trying to make twenty-seven dollars become dinner, gas, and one more day of peace in the house. They may whisper a prayer before walking in. They may still give kindness to the cashier. They may still ask God for strength. Their faith may look small to someone who has never had to do that math. But Jesus sees the cost of that moment. He sees the two coins.
Now imagine someone watching that same person struggle and saying only, “You should trust God more.” That is not spiritual wisdom. That is cruelty dressed up in religious language. Trusting God does not mean we stop caring about whether people eat. Faith does not cancel mercy. Prayer does not replace responsibility. If my theology makes me comfortable while someone beside me is drowning, then my theology has drifted away from Jesus.
This is the part of the story that reaches into our lives and asks for honesty. Have we ever praised someone’s endurance because it was easier than helping them? Have we ever admired someone’s sacrifice while secretly benefiting from it? Have we ever called someone faithful when what we really meant was that they were convenient? Have we ever used spiritual words to avoid practical love?
Those questions are uncomfortable, but they are needed. Jesus did not train His disciples by letting them stay comfortable. He interrupted their normal way of seeing. He made them look at a woman who had no reason to impress anybody. He made them recognize that the smallest public act can carry the largest private cost. He made them face the difference between religion that counts money and faith that sees people.
There is a quiet warning here for anyone who carries responsibility. Parents, leaders, teachers, pastors, employers, friends, spouses, adult children caring for aging parents, anyone who has influence over another person’s life. Be careful what you ask from people. Be careful what you praise. Be careful when someone gives everything and you are tempted to call it beautiful without asking if it is sustainable. Be careful when devotion becomes a reason to ignore damage. Be careful when sacrifice becomes something you expect from others but would not carry yourself.
Jesus never taught us to exploit the willing. He taught us to love them. He never taught us to drain the faithful. He taught us to wash feet. He never taught us to build holy-looking systems on the backs of people who are already barely standing. He taught us that the last, the least, the overlooked, and the burdened are not background characters in the kingdom of God.
That is why the widow matters. She is not in the story to help us build a cold rule about giving. She is there because Jesus would not let her disappear into the machinery of religious life. He would not let the disciples be dazzled by abundance while missing sacrifice. He would not let a woman with two coins become invisible.
And maybe, if we are honest, we need Jesus to do that for us too. We need Him to interrupt the way we see. We need Him to slow us down before we mistake size for faithfulness. We need Him to make us notice the person at the edge of the room, the tired voice on the phone, the quiet coworker who never complains, the family member who always says they are fine, the faithful person who keeps giving but is running out inside.
The widow’s two coins still speak, but they do not only say, “Give like her.” They also say, “Do not ignore her.” They say, “Do not use her.” They say, “Do not make her sacrifice easier for you to praise than her suffering is for you to address.” They say, “If Jesus has made you see her, then seeing her is now part of your obedience.”
That is where this story becomes more than a temple scene. It becomes a test of our own hearts. Not the kind of test that asks how much money we can drop into a box, but the kind that asks whether we can still recognize the image of God in someone who has almost nothing left. The kind that asks whether our faith has enough mercy in it to move toward the person Jesus points out.
Because when faith is used against the vulnerable, it stops sounding like Jesus. But when faith opens our eyes to the vulnerable, we begin to understand why He called His disciples over in the first place.
Chapter 3: When Your Two Coins Are Not Money
There are mornings when a person wakes up already knowing they do not have much to give. The alarm sounds, the room is still dark, and for a few seconds they lie there trying to gather themselves before the day starts asking for them. The phone has messages. The house has needs. The body feels tired before the feet touch the floor. No one would call that moment holy, but it may be one of the places where God is paying the closest attention.
That is why the widow’s two coins have to become more than a money lesson. Money is the visible part of the story, but cost is the deeper part. Jesus was not impressed by metal. He was moved by what those coins represented. They were her remaining strength made visible. They were tomorrow placed into God’s hands. They were the small sound of a large surrender. And if we only talk about coins, we miss the way this story reaches into every person who has ever kept giving from a place that was nearly empty.
Your two coins may be patience. You may be a parent trying to answer gently when your child has asked the same question ten times and your nerves are thin. You may have spent the day working, cleaning, solving, driving, calling, paying, and worrying, and now the people you love still need your tenderness. From the outside, it may look like a normal evening. Dinner, dishes, homework, laundry, a tired conversation in the hallway. But Jesus sees the cost of not snapping. He sees the sacrifice of choosing softness when pressure has made you feel sharp inside.
Your two coins may be faith. Not loud faith. Not confident faith that walks into a room with shining certainty. Maybe it is the kind of faith that sits on the edge of the bed at night and says, “God, I am still here,” because that is all you can honestly say. Maybe you are not full of answers. Maybe you are not feeling victorious. Maybe your prayer is not beautiful. Maybe it is just a tired sentence spoken into a quiet room. But heaven does not despise the prayer that comes from an exhausted heart. Jesus knows when a whispered prayer costs more than a public speech.
Your two coins may be honesty. You may be tempted to pretend because pretending would be easier. You may be in a conversation where you could protect your image, hide the truth, avoid responsibility, or make yourself look better than you are. But something in you knows that following Jesus means stepping into the light, even when your voice shakes. So you tell the truth. You admit where you were wrong. You say what needs to be said without dressing it up. Other people may not see how hard that was. Jesus does.
A person does not have to stand in a temple treasury to give something costly. Sometimes the offering happens in a hospital hallway when someone keeps praying while waiting for news. Sometimes it happens at a kitchen table when a couple opens the bills and chooses not to turn fear into cruelty. Sometimes it happens in a quiet office when someone refuses to join the lie that would make their life easier. Sometimes it happens when a person who has been hurt chooses not to pass that hurt to someone else.
That is one of the reasons this widow matters so much. She gives language to hidden cost. She helps us see that the kingdom of God notices what the world cannot measure. Most of the giving that shapes a faithful life will never be counted in public. No one will know how many times you swallowed pride to protect peace. No one will know how many times you wanted to quit but stayed faithful one more day. No one will know how many times you carried fear and still chose love. But Jesus sees the two coins under every ordinary act of obedience.
There is a danger, though, in knowing that Jesus sees the cost. The danger is that we may start believing the cost means we are never allowed to rest. Some people have been taught, directly or indirectly, that faithfulness means endless giving with no boundaries, no help, no honesty, and no human need. They have learned to treat exhaustion as proof of devotion. They have learned to feel guilty when they need a break. They have learned to call burnout sacrifice because nobody ever told them that Jesus also invited tired people to come to Him and receive rest.
The widow’s story should not be used to trap people in endless depletion. Jesus saw her, but He never taught His followers to ignore hunger, poverty, or need. When crowds were hungry, He did not say, “Your hunger proves your faith.” He fed them. When people cried out for mercy, He did not say, “Keep suffering quietly.” He stopped. When the sick came near, He did not use their pain as decoration for a religious lesson. He touched, healed, listened, and restored.
So if your two coins are the last of your strength, do not hear this story as a command to destroy yourself. Hear it as a reminder that Jesus sees the truth of your condition. He does not look at your tiredness with contempt. He does not shame you for being human. He does not ask you to act like you have abundance when He knows you are living from what is left. He sees the gift, and He also sees the need of the giver.
That difference matters. There is a kind of religious thinking that only asks, “What can you give?” Jesus asks a deeper question: “Who are you becoming, and what is happening to your heart while you give?” If giving makes a person proud, cold, resentful, empty, or invisible to the people around them, something has gone wrong. God does not need us to become less human in order to be faithful. Jesus took on flesh. He entered hunger, thirst, tears, fatigue, grief, friendship, and pain. He knows our limits from the inside.
That is why the two coins should lead us into honesty, not performance. Maybe your honest prayer today is not, “Lord, look how much I can give.” Maybe it is, “Lord, this is all I have, and I need You to help me.” That is not weakness. That is truth. The widow’s story is not about pretending small things are large. It is about God seeing the true weight of small things when they come from a costly place.
I think of a man sitting in his truck before going inside after work. He has given the day his labor, his patience, his attention, and his body. He knows the people inside the house need him too. They need his presence, not just his paycheck. For a minute, he sits there with both hands on the steering wheel, trying to leave the stress in the driveway. That minute may be invisible to everyone else, but Jesus sees it. He sees the decision to walk inside with love instead of dragging the whole weight of the day through the door.
I think of a woman caring for an aging parent who no longer remembers every kindness. She changes sheets, manages medicine, repeats answers, handles appointments, and sometimes cries in the laundry room because she does not want anyone to feel like a burden. Her offering may not look dramatic. It may look like another ordinary Tuesday. But Jesus sees the two coins. He sees the cost of love that keeps showing up when appreciation is rare and the work is constant.
I think of a young person trying to follow Jesus in a world that keeps pulling them in a dozen directions. They want to belong. They want to be understood. They want someone to notice how hard it is to choose what is right when wrong looks easier and louder. Their two coins may be one quiet decision not to become false just to be accepted. Jesus sees that too.
This is what makes the widow’s story so tender and so sharp at the same time. It comforts the unseen giver, but it confronts the careless observer. It tells the tired person, “Jesus sees what this costs.” It tells everyone nearby, “Do not ignore the one who is paying that cost.” It lifts the burdened heart, but it also awakens the responsible heart.
We need both.
A person who is down to two coins needs to know that God sees them with compassion. But a community that sees someone down to two coins needs to ask what love requires. If a friend is always giving from emptiness, maybe the answer is not another compliment. Maybe the answer is a meal, a phone call, a ride, an offer to sit with them, a quiet act of help that does not make them feel ashamed. If a family member is always the strong one, maybe the answer is not more reliance. Maybe the answer is finally noticing that strength has been expensive.
Jesus did not let His disciples miss the widow because He did not want His followers to become blind in spiritual language. He did not want them to know Scripture and miss suffering. He did not want them to preach faith and ignore hunger. He did not want them to build communities where the most faithful people were the most drained and the least protected.
That is why this story still reaches into us. It asks the giver to bring the truth to Jesus. It asks the observer to become merciful. It asks all of us to stop measuring life by what is loud, large, public, or impressive. The two coins are not only what she gave. They are a question placed in the hands of every disciple: can you see what this costs?
Maybe today your two coins are not money. Maybe they are the last of your patience, the last of your courage, the last of your hope, the last of your willingness to try again. Bring them to Jesus honestly. Do not polish them. Do not exaggerate them. Do not hide how small they feel. He already knows. And when He sees them, He does not only see what you give. He sees you.
And when He lets you see someone else’s two coins, do not walk away unchanged. Do not make their sacrifice into a sentence and move on. Let it become a call to love them more carefully. Let it make you slower to judge and quicker to help. Let it teach you that the kingdom of God begins to look like Jesus wherever people stop counting coins long enough to see the person holding them.
Chapter 4: The People Jesus Calls Over
A phone lights up on a kitchen counter with a message that says, “I’m fine.” The person reading it knows better. They know the sentence is too short, the timing is strange, and the friend who sent it has been carrying more than they admit. It would be easy to leave it alone. Everyone is busy. Everyone has their own problems. Everyone knows what it feels like to be tired. But there are moments when love begins with not pretending we did not notice.
That is part of what Jesus did with His disciples near the temple treasury. He did not only see the widow Himself. He called others into seeing her. That detail matters because Jesus could have kept the moment private. He could have quietly honored her in His heart and moved on. Instead, He turned to His disciples and brought them into the scene. He made her visible to the people who were going to learn His way.
In other words, Jesus did not let seeing remain a private spiritual feeling. He made it part of discipleship.
That is where this story becomes uncomfortable in a useful way. Many of us want a faith that helps us feel close to God, but Jesus keeps teaching a faith that also makes us responsible for people. He does not let His followers stay in the safe place of private admiration. He pulls them toward real human need. He trains their eyes, because untrained eyes can stand beside suffering and still miss it.
The disciples had probably seen many people give that day. They may have noticed the rich. They may have heard the sound of large gifts. They may have been impressed by what everybody else was impressed by. That is normal. Human attention is easily pulled toward size, success, confidence, and noise. We notice what announces itself. We miss what arrives quietly.
The widow arrived quietly.
That is why Jesus had to call them over.
He was not only teaching them about her. He was teaching them about themselves. He was showing them how easily they could become the kind of people who walk with Jesus and still overlook the person He is watching. That is a frightening possibility. A person can be close to the right words and still miss the right heart. A person can follow the movement of religion and still fail to see the human being in front of them.
This is why spiritual growth is not only about what we believe in our heads. It is also about what we notice with our lives. If following Jesus does not make us more aware of the overlooked, something is off. If our faith makes us quick to debate but slow to care, something is off. If we can talk about God while ignoring the person whose life is quietly falling apart, something is off.
The widow’s story reminds us that Jesus trains attention.
That may sound small, but it is not. Attention is one of the first acts of love. Before we help, we notice. Before we carry, we see. Before we speak with wisdom, we listen long enough to understand what is really happening. A rushed person may miss the widow. A proud person may dismiss her. A distracted person may never know she was there. A disciple of Jesus is supposed to become harder to blind.
Think about a workplace where one person always says yes. They take the extra shift, answer the late email, fix what others leave unfinished, cover for the team, and keep the peace because someone has to. Over time, everyone starts calling them reliable. That sounds like praise, but it can hide a lack of care. Reliable can become the polite word people use for someone they have learned to overuse. If Jesus stood in that workplace, I wonder if He would point and say, “Look at what this is costing them.”
Think about a family where one adult child becomes the default caregiver. Everyone appreciates them, but appreciation does not get the prescriptions picked up. Appreciation does not sit in the waiting room. Appreciation does not answer the same anxious phone call for the fourth time in a day. The person doing the work may be praised at holidays and forgotten on hard Tuesdays. Jesus sees that. And when He lets the rest of the family see it too, the right response is not just emotion. It is participation.
Think about a church where the same few people keep serving until they are worn thin. They unlock the doors, make the coffee, teach the children, visit the sick, clean the room, pray with strangers, and show up early enough that others never have to think about what happens before they arrive. A community can become so used to their sacrifice that it stops recognizing it as sacrifice. It becomes background. It becomes expected. Then one day the faithful person breaks down, steps away, or goes quiet, and everyone acts surprised.
Jesus calls His disciples over before it gets there.
He says, in effect, “Do you see her?”
That question needs to live in us. Do you see her? Do you see him? Do you see the person behind the role, behind the responsibility, behind the strong face, behind the small offering, behind the sentence that says, “I’m fine”? Do you see the cost, or only the result?
This is where the widow’s story becomes a correction to spiritual laziness. It is not enough to say we care about people in general. Love becomes real when it notices a particular person in a particular moment. Not humanity as an idea. Not compassion as a slogan. A real person. A real burden. A real chance to respond.
And response does not always have to be dramatic. Sometimes it is a quiet question asked with enough patience to hear the real answer. Sometimes it is sending money without making someone explain their need. Sometimes it is taking a task off someone’s plate. Sometimes it is sitting with a person who is too tired to be cheerful. Sometimes it is defending someone whose sacrifice has been taken for granted. Sometimes it is simply refusing to let a person disappear behind what they provide.
That last one matters. People often become invisible through usefulness. The more dependable they are, the easier it becomes for others to forget they are human. The more they give, the more people assume they can keep giving. The more they carry, the more normal their burden starts to look. The widow’s two coins break that illusion. Jesus points to her and says there is a whole life behind this small act. There is a soul here. There is cost here. There is something heaven sees that the crowd does not.
We need that kind of sight because our world trains us in the opposite direction. We are trained to notice performance, image, numbers, titles, money, public strength, and visible success. Jesus trains us to notice cost, hidden faith, unseen pressure, quiet courage, and the person who has almost nothing left but still comes forward.
This kind of seeing will change the way we lead. It will change the way we parent. It will change the way we treat people at work. It will change the way we build churches and families and friendships. It will make us slower to use people and quicker to protect them. It will make us ask better questions before we praise sacrifice. It will make us less impressed by abundance and more tender toward costly faith.
A father may begin to notice that his teenager’s attitude is not only rebellion but fear. A husband may begin to notice that his wife’s silence is not peace but exhaustion. A friend may begin to notice that the funny person in the group is making jokes so nobody asks what hurts. A leader may begin to notice that the volunteer who never complains is close to empty. A believer may begin to notice that the person sitting alone after the service is not being antisocial but is trying not to fall apart in public.
That is discipleship too.
Jesus did not call His disciples over so they could stare at the widow and feel sad for a moment. He called them over because the way they saw her would shape the way they served the world. If they learned to see like Jesus, they would build communities that looked different from the religious systems that had failed her. If they missed the lesson, they could easily repeat the same mistake with new words and cleaner language.
That is the warning for all of us. We can talk about Jesus and still build places where widows disappear. We can use Christian language and still take faithful people for granted. We can celebrate generosity while creating cultures where exhausted people feel guilty for needing help. We can call ourselves spiritual while becoming numb to the cost others are paying.
But Jesus keeps calling us over.
He calls us over when someone is quietly overwhelmed. He calls us over when a person’s small act carries more weight than anyone understands. He calls us over when we are tempted to be impressed by the wrong thing. He calls us over when we would rather not see, because seeing may require us to change.
That is why the widow cannot remain only a touching Bible story. She becomes a test of attention. She stands in the temple with two coins, and Jesus asks His followers to learn a different way of looking. Not the crowd’s way. Not the system’s way. His way.
And once Jesus has shown us the widow, we are responsible for what we do with what we have seen.
Chapter 4: The People Jesus Calls Over
A phone lights up on a kitchen counter with a message that says, “I’m fine.” The person reading it knows better. They know the sentence is too short, the timing is strange, and the friend who sent it has been carrying more than they admit. It would be easy to leave it alone. Everyone is busy. Everyone has their own problems. Everyone knows what it feels like to be tired. But there are moments when love begins with not pretending we did not notice.
That is part of what Jesus did with His disciples near the temple treasury. He did not only see the widow Himself. He called others into seeing her. That detail matters because Jesus could have kept the moment private. He could have quietly honored her in His heart and moved on. Instead, He turned to His disciples and brought them into the scene. He made her visible to the people who were going to learn His way.
In other words, Jesus did not let seeing remain a private spiritual feeling. He made it part of discipleship.
That is where this story becomes uncomfortable in a useful way. Many of us want a faith that helps us feel close to God, but Jesus keeps teaching a faith that also makes us responsible for people. He does not let His followers stay in the safe place of private admiration. He pulls them toward real human need. He trains their eyes, because untrained eyes can stand beside suffering and still miss it.
The disciples had probably seen many people give that day. They may have noticed the rich. They may have heard the sound of large gifts. They may have been impressed by what everybody else was impressed by. That is normal. Human attention is easily pulled toward size, success, confidence, and noise. We notice what announces itself. We miss what arrives quietly.
The widow arrived quietly.
That is why Jesus had to call them over.
He was not only teaching them about her. He was teaching them about themselves. He was showing them how easily they could become the kind of people who walk with Jesus and still overlook the person He is watching. That is a frightening possibility. A person can be close to the right words and still miss the right heart. A person can follow the movement of religion and still fail to see the human being in front of them.
This is why spiritual growth is not only about what we believe in our heads. It is also about what we notice with our lives. If following Jesus does not make us more aware of the overlooked, something is off. If our faith makes us quick to debate but slow to care, something is off. If we can talk about God while ignoring the person whose life is quietly falling apart, something is off.
The widow’s story reminds us that Jesus trains attention.
That may sound small, but it is not. Attention is one of the first acts of love. Before we help, we notice. Before we carry, we see. Before we speak with wisdom, we listen long enough to understand what is really happening. A rushed person may miss the widow. A proud person may dismiss her. A distracted person may never know she was there. A disciple of Jesus is supposed to become harder to blind.
Think about a workplace where one person always says yes. They take the extra shift, answer the late email, fix what others leave unfinished, cover for the team, and keep the peace because someone has to. Over time, everyone starts calling them reliable. That sounds like praise, but it can hide a lack of care. Reliable can become the polite word people use for someone they have learned to overuse. If Jesus stood in that workplace, I wonder if He would point and say, “Look at what this is costing them.”
Think about a family where one adult child becomes the default caregiver. Everyone appreciates them, but appreciation does not get the prescriptions picked up. Appreciation does not sit in the waiting room. Appreciation does not answer the same anxious phone call for the fourth time in a day. The person doing the work may be praised at holidays and forgotten on hard Tuesdays. Jesus sees that. And when He lets the rest of the family see it too, the right response is not just emotion. It is participation.
Think about a church where the same few people keep serving until they are worn thin. They unlock the doors, make the coffee, teach the children, visit the sick, clean the room, pray with strangers, and show up early enough that others never have to think about what happens before they arrive. A community can become so used to their sacrifice that it stops recognizing it as sacrifice. It becomes background. It becomes expected. Then one day the faithful person breaks down, steps away, or goes quiet, and everyone acts surprised.
Jesus calls His disciples over before it gets there.
He says, in effect, “Do you see her?”
That question needs to live in us. Do you see her? Do you see him? Do you see the person behind the role, behind the responsibility, behind the strong face, behind the small offering, behind the sentence that says, “I’m fine”? Do you see the cost, or only the result?
This is where the widow’s story becomes a correction to spiritual laziness. It is not enough to say we care about people in general. Love becomes real when it notices a particular person in a particular moment. Not humanity as an idea. Not compassion as a slogan. A real person. A real burden. A real chance to respond.
And response does not always have to be dramatic. Sometimes it is a quiet question asked with enough patience to hear the real answer. Sometimes it is sending money without making someone explain their need. Sometimes it is taking a task off someone’s plate. Sometimes it is sitting with a person who is too tired to be cheerful. Sometimes it is defending someone whose sacrifice has been taken for granted. Sometimes it is simply refusing to let a person disappear behind what they provide.
That last one matters. People often become invisible through usefulness. The more dependable they are, the easier it becomes for others to forget they are human. The more they give, the more people assume they can keep giving. The more they carry, the more normal their burden starts to look. The widow’s two coins break that illusion. Jesus points to her and says there is a whole life behind this small act. There is a soul here. There is cost here. There is something heaven sees that the crowd does not.
We need that kind of sight because our world trains us in the opposite direction. We are trained to notice performance, image, numbers, titles, money, public strength, and visible success. Jesus trains us to notice cost, hidden faith, unseen pressure, quiet courage, and the person who has almost nothing left but still comes forward.
This kind of seeing will change the way we lead. It will change the way we parent. It will change the way we treat people at work. It will change the way we build churches and families and friendships. It will make us slower to use people and quicker to protect them. It will make us ask better questions before we praise sacrifice. It will make us less impressed by abundance and more tender toward costly faith.
A father may begin to notice that his teenager’s attitude is not only rebellion but fear. A husband may begin to notice that his wife’s silence is not peace but exhaustion. A friend may begin to notice that the funny person in the group is making jokes so nobody asks what hurts. A leader may begin to notice that the volunteer who never complains is close to empty. A believer may begin to notice that the person sitting alone after the service is not being antisocial but is trying not to fall apart in public.
That is discipleship too.
Jesus did not call His disciples over so they could stare at the widow and feel sad for a moment. He called them over because the way they saw her would shape the way they served the world. If they learned to see like Jesus, they would build communities that looked different from the religious systems that had failed her. If they missed the lesson, they could easily repeat the same mistake with new words and cleaner language.
That is the warning for all of us. We can talk about Jesus and still build places where widows disappear. We can use Christian language and still take faithful people for granted. We can celebrate generosity while creating cultures where exhausted people feel guilty for needing help. We can call ourselves spiritual while becoming numb to the cost others are paying.
But Jesus keeps calling us over.
He calls us over when someone is quietly overwhelmed. He calls us over when a person’s small act carries more weight than anyone understands. He calls us over when we are tempted to be impressed by the wrong thing. He calls us over when we would rather not see, because seeing may require us to change.
That is why the widow cannot remain only a touching Bible story. She becomes a test of attention. She stands in the temple with two coins, and Jesus asks His followers to learn a different way of looking. Not the crowd’s way. Not the system’s way. His way.
And once Jesus has shown us the widow, we are responsible for what we do with what we have seen.
Chapter 5: The Difference Between Being Seen and Being Used
There is a moment when a person realizes they have become useful to everyone and known by almost no one. It can happen while washing a plate after everyone else has left the kitchen, or while sitting at a desk after the meeting ends, or while driving home with the radio low because noise feels like one more thing to carry. They are appreciated, maybe even praised, but not really checked on. People trust them to keep showing up. People depend on them to keep giving. But very few people ask what the giving is costing.
That difference matters.
Being seen is not the same as being used.
The widow was useful to the temple system in the smallest possible way. Her two coins went in. The machinery of religion continued. The boxes received the offering. The day moved forward. But Jesus did not look at her as a useful person. He looked at her as a beloved person. He did not reduce her to what she contributed. He saw the condition of the soul and body behind the contribution.
That is one of the clearest differences between Jesus and cold religion. Cold religion asks, “What can we get from this person?” Jesus asks, “What is happening to this person?” Cold religion counts the gift. Jesus notices the giver. Cold religion can praise sacrifice while quietly benefiting from the exhaustion that produced it. Jesus refuses to let the person disappear behind what they gave.
This is why the story is not only about the widow’s faith. It is also about the kind of people Jesus is trying to form. He wants disciples who do not use spiritual language to avoid human responsibility. He wants people who can look at a small act and sense a deep cost underneath it. He wants communities where the faithful are not drained until they break, where the poor are not shamed into silence, where the tired are not told to prove their devotion by pretending they are fine.
That is a hard word because many of us have been on both sides of this. We know what it feels like to be used, but we have also benefited from the sacrifices of others without fully noticing. We may not have meant to. Most people do not wake up and decide to ignore pain. It happens slowly. We get used to someone’s reliability. We get used to their yes. We get used to their ability to absorb pressure. We stop hearing the strain in their voice because they have carried it for so long.
A family can do this to one person. The person who handles the appointments becomes the appointment person. The person who keeps the peace becomes the peacekeeper. The person who remembers birthdays, buys groceries, manages medication, fills out forms, and answers late-night calls becomes the person everybody assumes will keep doing it. Then, when they finally say they are tired, everyone is surprised, even though the warning signs were there for years.
A workplace can do this too. The dependable employee becomes the place where other people’s unfinished work lands. They are praised in meetings and overloaded in private. They are told they are valuable, but the proof of their value is that more weight gets put on them. Their two coins may be time, sleep, health, patience, or the quiet dignity they keep trying to protect while people continue to ask for more.
Even friendships can do this. There is often one person who listens to everyone else. They answer the calls, remember the hard dates, check in after the appointment, sit through the tears, and make room for everyone’s pain. But when their own life gets heavy, they are not always sure where to turn. They have become the safe place for others, but nobody has learned how to be a safe place for them.
Jesus sees that.
And when Jesus sees it, He does not simply say, “How inspiring.” He teaches His people to become different. He teaches us to notice not only the offering but the depletion. Not only the service but the soul. Not only the strength but the loneliness that may be hiding underneath it.
This is where the widow’s story becomes deeply personal. It asks us to examine the way we treat people who give. Do we love them, or do we only love what they provide? Do we know them, or do we only know the role they fill? Do we care about their limits, or do we quietly resent them when they finally need rest?
That question can reach into marriage, parenting, friendship, leadership, ministry, and daily work. It can reach into the way we treat the cashier who looks worn down but still has to be polite. It can reach into the way we treat the delivery driver, the nurse, the teacher, the volunteer, the aging parent, the spouse who carries invisible mental lists all day long. The widow’s story is not locked in the temple. It walks into every place where human beings are valued more for what they give than for who they are.
Jesus will not let us keep that kind of vision.
He points to the widow and trains us to see a whole person. That is the mercy of the scene. He does not let her be only poor. He does not let her be only generous. He does not let her be only a lesson. He sees her full humanity. She is a woman with a life, a fear, a faith, a future, and a cost no one else seemed to count.
If we are going to follow Jesus, we have to let Him correct the way we see people who are easy to use. The quiet ones. The faithful ones. The responsible ones. The ones who do not make a scene. The ones who keep going long after they should have been helped. The ones whose strength has made other people lazy.
That phrase may sting, but it is true. Sometimes another person’s strength becomes an excuse for our lack of love. We tell ourselves they can handle it because they always have. We tell ourselves they would ask if they needed anything, even though we know many hurting people do not know how to ask. We tell ourselves they are fine because admitting they are not would require something from us.
Jesus does not give us that escape.
He called His disciples over because He wanted them to stop and look. He wanted them to feel the cost. He wanted them to understand that the kingdom He was bringing would not be built on the backs of invisible people. It would not treat the vulnerable as resources. It would not call neglect faith. It would not call exhaustion holiness. It would not use the language of sacrifice to avoid the command to love.
That is why, if you are the person who feels used, you need to know something tender and true. Jesus sees more than what you produce. He sees you. He sees the cost of being dependable. He sees how long you have held things together. He sees the quiet moments when you almost fall apart and then gather yourself because someone still needs dinner, someone still needs medicine, someone still needs the bill paid, someone still needs you to be calm.
You are not invisible to Him.
But being seen by Jesus is not a command to let everyone keep draining you. Sometimes the holiest thing you can do is tell the truth about your limits. Sometimes faith sounds like, “I need help.” Sometimes obedience looks like stepping out of the role of endless giver so others can finally learn love, responsibility, and maturity. Jesus sees sacrifice, but He also invites the weary to come to Him. He does not ask you to become a machine in order to prove your devotion.
The widow’s story does not give every answer to every situation. It does not tell us exactly what happened next. It does not remove all the tension. But it does reveal the heart of Jesus, and that is enough to guide us. Jesus sees costly faith. Jesus confronts systems that devour the vulnerable. Jesus trains His followers to notice the overlooked. Jesus honors the giver without turning the giver into an object to be used.
That means we should become people who ask better questions. Not nosy questions. Not controlling questions. Loving questions. Are you okay? What do you need? What is this costing you? How can I help carry this? Have we been depending on you without caring for you? Have we praised your strength while ignoring your pain?
Those questions can change a home.
They can change a friendship.
They can change a church.
They can change the way a person survives a hard season.
Because sometimes the difference between being used and being loved is that someone finally notices the cost and does not walk away.
I think of a teenage son who finally sees his mother sitting alone at the table after everyone else has gone to bed. For years, he thought clean clothes, paid bills, and food in the house just happened because she was mom. Then one night he sees her rubbing her forehead over a stack of papers, and something in him wakes up. He does not solve the whole problem. He cannot. But he asks if she is okay, and for the first time, she knows he sees more than what she does for him.
That is a small picture of discipleship.
Noticing.
Caring.
Moving closer.
Letting love become practical.
The widow gave two coins, and Jesus saw the cost. Now He asks us to become the kind of people who see the cost too. Not so we can stare at suffering. Not so we can feel religious for a moment. Not so we can use someone else’s sacrifice as a beautiful story. He calls us to see so we can love with our eyes open.
Because in the kingdom of Jesus, people are never just what they give. They are sons and daughters of God. They are souls with weight, stories, fears, needs, limits, and holy worth. The world may count the coins and move on. Jesus never does.
And if we belong to Him, neither can we.
Chapter 6: Learning to Give Without Disappearing
There is a moment in many lives when a person realizes they have been calling depletion faithfulness. It may happen after a long day when the house is finally quiet and the body feels heavier than it should. It may happen after another yes leaves the mouth before the heart has time to tell the truth. It may happen while reading a message from someone who needs more, and instead of compassion rising first, resentment rises because there is almost nothing left to give. That moment can scare a sincere believer, because they may think resentment means they have become selfish. Sometimes it simply means they have been living without room to breathe.
This matters because the widow’s story can easily be misunderstood by people who are already too hard on themselves. Someone hears that she gave everything she had to live on, and they think the faithful thing must always be to empty themselves completely, no matter what happens afterward. They assume love means never saying no, never admitting need, never taking rest, never letting anyone else carry responsibility, and never asking whether the cost has become too much. But that is not the way of Jesus.
Jesus honored the widow, but Jesus also invited the weary to come to Him. Jesus saw costly sacrifice, but Jesus also pulled His disciples away from crowds so they could rest. Jesus gave Himself fully, but He did not live as a person controlled by every demand placed in front of Him. He healed, taught, fed, listened, and loved, but He also withdrew to pray. He stayed close to the Father. He moved from obedience, not from panic. He was never selfish, but He was also never driven by the fear that everyone’s need had to be answered in the exact way they expected.
That is important for anyone who has confused being used up with being holy. The widow’s two coins reveal that Jesus sees the cost of faith, but they do not teach that God wants His children crushed by constant extraction. There is a difference between freely offering something to God and slowly disappearing because nobody around you has learned how to love you well. There is a difference between sacrifice and being consumed. There is a difference between generosity and a life where your limits are treated like disobedience.
A mother may know this difference in her bones. She loves her children, but there are nights when every small request feels like one more spoon scraping the bottom of an empty bowl. She does not want to be irritated by the child asking for help with homework, or the teenager needing a ride, or the baby crying again, but her body is telling the truth. She needs rest. She needs help. She needs somebody to see that love is still love even when it is tired. If all she ever hears is that good mothers sacrifice, she may begin to believe that needing support makes her less faithful. That lie can do real damage.
A man may know it too. He may have learned early that his worth is tied to providing, fixing, staying calm, and never needing too much. So he keeps going. He works through pain. He hides fear. He gives time, money, advice, and strength until his own soul becomes a locked room. People call him solid, and he likes being solid, but he also wonders whether anyone would still love him if he admitted he was tired. His two coins may be the last of his emotional honesty. He may need Jesus to meet him there before silence hardens into distance.
This is where the widow’s story should make us gentler with ourselves and more honest with God. If you are down to two coins, you do not have to pretend you are carrying a full purse. You do not have to perform abundance for people who never asked what you had left. You do not have to turn exhaustion into a spiritual costume. The Lord who saw the widow sees the truth of your condition, and truth is always a safer place to meet Jesus than performance.
There is a prayer that may not sound impressive, but it may be the most faithful prayer a tired person can pray: “Lord, I do not have much left.” That prayer is not failure. It is surrender. It is the moment the soul stops pretending and finally opens its hand. God can work with honesty. He can bring comfort, correction, provision, rest, courage, and wisdom into a truthful heart. What keeps us stuck is not weakness. What keeps us stuck is hiding weakness behind religious language until we no longer know how to ask for help.
The widow did not hide the smallness of what she had. She came with two coins. That image is tender because it strips away illusion. She did not arrive with the appearance of wealth. She did not make a large sound. She did not impress the crowd. Yet Jesus saw her. That means we do not have to inflate our offerings before bringing them to God. We can bring the small prayer, the tired faith, the uncertain obedience, the honest confession, the trembling hope, and the plain truth that we are not as strong as people think.
But honesty with God should also create honesty with people. Some of us have trained others to ignore our limits because we never admit them. That is not always our fault. Many people learned survival before they learned trust. They learned to be useful because usefulness felt safer than need. They learned to say yes because no created conflict. They learned to smile because tears made other people uncomfortable. But following Jesus can begin to heal that pattern. It can teach us that humility is not pretending we have no needs. Humility is telling the truth before God and letting love become real enough to involve other people.
This is not easy. If you have spent years being the dependable one, admitting limits can feel like betrayal. It can feel as if you are letting everyone down. But sometimes telling the truth about what you can carry is the only way a family, friendship, church, or workplace can become healthier. If one person keeps carrying too much in silence, everybody else is denied the chance to grow in love. Your honesty may be the doorway through which someone else finally learns responsibility.
Imagine a woman who has handled every holiday meal for twenty years. She shops, cooks, cleans, decorates, remembers preferences, manages tension, and collapses afterward while everyone talks about how wonderful it was. One year, she says, “I cannot do it all this time. I need everyone to bring something and help clean up.” At first, the room may feel awkward. Some may not understand. But that moment may be holy. Not because she stopped loving them, but because she stopped disappearing. She allowed the family to become more truthful.
That kind of truth belongs in our faith too. The kingdom of God is not a place where one exhausted person quietly gives two coins forever while everyone else learns nothing. It is a place where Jesus teaches us to see, to care, to share burdens, to honor cost, and to let love become practical. When Paul later wrote that believers should carry one another’s burdens, he was not creating a soft slogan. He was describing a way of life where no one’s load is supposed to be invisible forever.
So what do we do with the widow’s story when we are the ones giving from emptiness? We bring Jesus what is true, not what sounds impressive. We ask for wisdom, not just endurance. We let Him show us the difference between obedience and fear. We allow Him to challenge the pride that refuses help and the despair that believes help will never come. We give what love calls us to give, but we do not confuse every demand with God’s voice.
And what do we do when we are the ones watching someone else give from emptiness? We move closer with care. We do not make their sacrifice into a speech and leave them alone. We ask what remains in their hand. We ask what remains in their heart. We look for ways to protect dignity while offering real support. We learn to notice when praise has become a way to avoid participation.
This may be one of the most needed lessons in a tired world. People are not machines. Faithful people are not endless wells. Strong people still need care. Generous people still need rest. The person who gives two coins may love God deeply, but that does not mean everyone else is free to ignore whether they eat tomorrow.
Jesus did not stop the widow by taking away her choice, but He did stop His disciples from missing the cost. Maybe He is still doing that with us. Maybe He is still stopping our hurry, our assumptions, our shallow admiration, and our careless use of people. Maybe He is still teaching us that faith is not proven by how many people we can drain in God’s name, but by how deeply we learn to see and love the people He places before us.
There is a better way to live than disappearing in the name of devotion. There is a better way to lead than using the faithful until they are empty. There is a better way to be a family, a church, a friend, a worker, a parent, a neighbor, and a disciple. It begins when we stop counting only the coins and start seeing the person. It grows when we tell the truth about what is left. It becomes holy when love stops being a compliment and becomes a shared burden, a meal delivered, a task lifted, a prayer spoken beside someone instead of over them.
The widow stood near the treasury with two coins in her hand. Jesus saw the cost. He still sees the cost. And when He opens our eyes to that cost, He is not asking us to become spectators of sacrifice. He is asking us to become people who know how to love without using, give without disappearing, and follow Him without losing sight of the wounded person right in front of us.
Chapter 7: What We Do After Jesus Makes Us See
A person can leave a hard conversation and know they have been shown something they cannot unsee. Maybe it happens after coffee with a friend who finally admits the marriage is colder than anyone knows. Maybe it happens after a neighbor says, almost casually, that the bills are behind again. Maybe it happens after someone laughs in a way that sounds too tired to be joy. You drive home afterward, and the words stay with you. You can go back to normal if you choose to, but something in you knows normal would be a kind of disobedience now.
That is where the widow’s story leaves us. Jesus does not let His disciples walk away with only a lesson in their heads. He gives them a new way of seeing, and once He gives that sight, they are responsible for it. The widow is not just someone they noticed for a moment. She becomes a question they will carry into every room where power, poverty, faith, sacrifice, and responsibility meet.
The same thing happens to us. Once Jesus teaches us to see the person behind the two coins, we cannot honestly go back to pretending we only saw the coins. We cannot go back to measuring people by what they produce, what they give, how useful they are, how strong they seem, or how quietly they endure. We have been called over. We have been shown the cost. Now love has to become more than a feeling.
This is where faith becomes practical in the most ordinary ways. It may not begin with a grand gesture. It may begin with sending the message you almost did not send. It may begin with asking the second question after someone says they are fine. It may begin with looking at the person who always serves and saying, “You do not have to carry this alone.” It may begin with changing how your home, your workplace, your church, or your friendships treat the person who always gives the most.
A woman at the end of a church gathering might be stacking chairs while everyone else talks near the door. She does it every week. Nobody asked her this time; she just saw what needed to be done. It would be easy to praise her servant’s heart and keep talking. It would be better to walk over, take two chairs from her hands, and ask how she is really doing. Not with a dramatic voice. Not to make her feel exposed. Just with the kind of quiet love that says, “I see more than the work you do.”
That is the kind of response this story is asking from us. Not guilt. Not performance. Not a moment of sadness that disappears by dinner. A changed way of living. Jesus does not shame His disciples for missing the widow at first. He simply brings them close enough to learn. That gives me hope, because many of us have missed people we should have seen. We have overlooked someone’s cost. We have benefited from someone’s sacrifice without understanding it. We have called someone strong because it was easier than admitting they needed help.
But conviction is not the end. Conviction is an open door. It is Jesus saying, “Come learn My way.” We do not have to stay blind. We do not have to stay careless. We do not have to keep repeating the patterns that drained people around us. We can become more awake, more tender, more honest, more willing to carry part of the load.
And if you are the widow in this story, if you are the one down to two coins in some hidden part of your life, I want you to hear this with no pressure attached to it. Jesus sees you before He ever uses you as an example. He sees the human being first. He sees your body, your fear, your tired mind, your quiet courage, your private prayers, and the way you keep trying when you do not know what comes next. You are not just useful to Him. You are loved by Him.
That may be hard to receive if you have spent a long time being needed. Being needed can feel close to being loved, but it is not the same thing. People can need what you provide and still not know your heart. They can depend on your strength and still not understand your weariness. They can praise your faithfulness and still fail to notice your loneliness. Jesus is not like that. He does not confuse your usefulness with your worth.
You may need permission to tell the truth. Not to become bitter. Not to punish people. Not to make yourself the center of every room. Just to stop pretending the purse is full when you are holding two coins. You may need to say, “I cannot do all of this anymore.” You may need to ask for help. You may need to rest without apologizing. You may need to let someone else learn responsibility. You may need to bring your honest condition to God instead of the polished version you think faith requires.
There is no shame in that. Jesus never asked tired people to lie about being tired. He never asked the hungry to pretend they were full. He never asked the grieving to smile so the room would feel easier. He came close to real people in real need. He touched lepers. He listened to the desperate. He fed crowds. He wept at a tomb. He received children. He noticed a widow with two coins. The heart of Jesus is not offended by human need. The heart of Jesus moves toward it.
And if you are not the widow right now, then do not turn this message into something sentimental. Let it become action. Look around your life with the eyes of Jesus. Who is carrying more than they say? Who keeps showing up but looks thinner in spirit than they used to? Who has become useful to you in a way that may have made them invisible? Who do you praise but rarely help? Who would be shocked if you finally noticed?
That last question matters. Some people around us have become so accustomed to being unseen that care might surprise them. A simple offer may feel like water in a dry place. A quiet act of help may remind them that God has not forgotten them. You do not have to save everyone. You are not Jesus. But you can obey Him in the place where He has made you see.
Maybe that obedience is practical. Bring a meal. Pay a bill quietly if you are able. Watch the kids for an afternoon. Take the late shift. Visit the person who has stopped expecting visits. Write the note. Make the call. Sit in the waiting room. Share the task. Give the tired person a way to rest without making them feel weak for needing it.
Maybe that obedience is emotional. Stop dismissing someone’s pain because they have always handled life well. Stop assuming the strong person is fine. Stop making jokes when a real question is needed. Stop using spiritual phrases to rush past grief, fear, or exhaustion. Learn to sit with someone’s truth without immediately correcting it, explaining it, or making it smaller.
Maybe that obedience is spiritual. Pray differently. Not from a distance that costs you nothing, but with a heart willing to be part of the answer if God asks. Ask the Lord to show you the people you have missed. Ask Him to make your faith warmer, not just louder. Ask Him to make your home, your work, your friendships, and your community safer for people who are down to two coins.
This is not complicated, but it is serious. The way of Jesus is often simple enough to understand and hard enough to require surrender. See people. Do not use them. Honor costly faith. Do not exploit it. Give with honesty. Do not disappear. Receive help with humility. Offer help with tenderness. Let the person matter more than what they provide.
The widow’s story does not end with all our questions answered. We still do not know what happened when she walked away from the treasury. We still feel the weight of the fact that Jesus did not stop her hand. We still sit with the tension of a beautiful gift received by a troubled system. But maybe the unanswered part is what keeps the story alive. It refuses to let us close the book too easily. It keeps asking whether we will become the kind of people who notice before someone is empty, care before someone breaks, and love before admiration becomes too cheap.
I think that is why Jesus called His disciples over. He wanted their future ministry to carry the memory of her. When they later served communities, cared for widows, shared food, taught believers, and carried the message of the risen Christ, maybe they remembered the woman with two coins. Maybe they remembered that Jesus measured differently. Maybe they remembered that the kingdom of God must never become a place where vulnerable people are praised while being neglected.
We need to remember too.
The world will keep counting coins. It will count money, numbers, titles, platforms, followers, houses, achievements, and public strength. Jesus will keep seeing cost. He will keep seeing the person who gives from an empty place. He will keep seeing the quiet sacrifice no one applauds. He will keep seeing the difference between faith that loves and religion that uses.
So bring Him your two coins, whatever they are today. Bring Him the honest truth of what you have left. Bring Him the faith that feels small, the strength that feels thin, the prayer that barely has words, the love that is tired but still alive. He sees it. He sees you.
And when He points out someone else with two coins, do not walk past them. Do not reduce them to inspiration. Do not make a lesson out of their suffering and then leave them alone. Move closer. Love better. Carry something. See them as Jesus sees them.
The widow walked into the temple with two small coins, and almost everyone could have missed her. But Jesus did not. He stopped His disciples long enough to show them a person the world had made easy to overlook. That is still what He does. He stops us in our hurry. He interrupts our shallow measurements. He teaches us to see the hidden cost inside ordinary faithfulness.
And once Jesus teaches us to see, walking past is no longer the same.
Your friend, Douglas Vandergraph Watch Douglas Vandergraph inspiring faith-based videos on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@douglasvandergraph Support the Christian encouragement library through GoFundMe: https://www.gofundme.com/f/help-douglas-vandergraph-build-a-christian-encouragement-lib Support the daily work by buying Douglas a coffee: https://www.buymeacoffee.com/douglasvandergraph
To all the fathers who are doing everything they can to make sure their families are happy, safe, and taken care of.
Being a father of two young boys, it’s a privilege. Hopefully, I can raise them to be decent adults. It’s a tough world out there so hopefully I can give them the tools to help succeed in life and maybe raise families of their own.
For those who dream of being a father but are unable to, I sympathize. I hope you do become one. If not, I hope you still have a positive male role model in your life.
Happy Father’s Day!
#happyfathersday #fathers #families
from
Roscoe's Quick Notes

Tuned in now to 105.3 The Fan, DFW's #1 Sports Station for the pregame show ahead of this afternoon's MLB Game for the Texasv Rangers vs the San Diego Padres. The opening pitch is half an hour away. I'll stay here for the radio call of the game as broadcast over MLB's Gameday Service..
And the adventure continues.