It's National Poetry Month! Submit your poetry and we'll publish it here on Read Write.as.
It's National Poetry Month! Submit your poetry and we'll publish it here on Read Write.as.
from Douglas Vandergraph
There are kinds of pain in life that are hard to explain unless you have lived them. One of them is the pain of being a parent who is trying. I do not mean a parent who is perfect. I do not mean a parent who always says the right thing or handles every moment well. I mean a parent who is honestly trying to love their child, trying to show up, trying to create a good memory, trying to keep the bridge standing, and still finding themselves wounded by the very person they would gladly give their life for. That pain does not usually arrive with drama that the outside world can see. It often comes quietly. It comes in a look, a tone, a sigh, a cold answer, a sharp remark, or a moment where your child treats your effort like it was an insult instead of a gift. That kind of thing can land deep in the heart, and when it keeps happening, it does something to a parent that is hard to describe.
A parent can start a day with hope and still end that same day feeling strangely empty. That is part of what makes the teenage years so difficult. You are often carrying memory and hope at the same time. You remember the earlier blowups. You remember the attitude. You remember the strange unpredictability that can turn a simple outing into emotional smoke and ashes. Yet you still hope. You still think maybe today will be different. Maybe today we will laugh. Maybe today she will be lighthearted. Maybe today he will relax. Maybe today we can get out of this house and spend a little time together without everything becoming tense. That is how love works in a parent. Even when there is history, even when there is bruising, love keeps finding a reason to try again. That is beautiful, but it also leaves a parent exposed.
Sometimes the hardest thing about loving a teenager is not their immaturity. It is your own vulnerability. You can know very well that they are emotional, unstable, still developing, still learning how to carry themselves, and it does not stop the pain when their storm lands on you. A parent can understand all the reasons and still feel the wound. That is what many people do not understand. They think maturity removes hurt. It does not. It may help you manage it. It may help you interpret it. It may help you avoid making everything about yourself. But it does not stop a parent from feeling the ache of being treated like a burden by the child they are trying to bless. It does not make it easy to carry a day that went wrong after you gave it your effort, your attention, and your heart.
There are also moments when a parent is tempted to protect themselves before the day even begins. That is a quiet place of heartbreak that many good mothers and fathers know very well. The invitation comes. The child asks if you are still going. The schedule is there. The day is possible. But the mind does not just hear the question. It hears all the older moments too. It remembers the ride where the attitude started halfway there. It remembers the public scene, the cold silence, the complaint, the disrespect, the accusation, the sharp turn from what was meant to be a kindness into something exhausting and painful. A part of the parent does not want to cancel because they do not care. A part of the parent wants to cancel because they do. There is only so much rejection a loving heart can take before it starts to flinch. That is not a sign that the parent has stopped caring. It is a sign that love has already been burned.
This is why the teenage years can become a hidden test of the soul. They do not just test your patience. They test your tenderness. They test whether your heart can stay open without becoming foolish. They test whether your love can remain warm without becoming weak. They test whether you can keep trying without turning every new moment into a courtroom where the past is always the loudest witness. A parent can begin to wonder if saying yes is wise. A parent can begin to wonder if trying harder only creates more pain. A parent can even begin to question themselves in deeper ways, because repeated hurt in a close relationship rarely stays on the surface. It starts reaching inward. It starts touching identity. It starts whispering the kind of questions that do damage if they sit too long in silence. Am I failing here. Am I blind to what my child really needs. Am I trying too hard. Am I not trying the right way. Why does my love keep landing like this.
Those questions do not come from weakness. They come from being invested. A disconnected parent does not ask those things. A careless parent does not stay up later than they should, replaying the day in their mind and trying to figure out where it went wrong. A selfish parent does not sit there wondering how to reach a child who seems determined to reject the reach. Those questions come from parents who are in it with their whole heart. They come from parents who have not given up even though the season is hard. They come from mothers and fathers who are still trying to learn the difference between wisdom and fear, between boundaries and withdrawal, between loving deeply and losing themselves in disappointment. That is one reason this pain can be so exhausting. It is not just a hard moment. It is a hard moment inside a relationship that matters more than almost anything else in the world.
There is another layer to it as well, and it is one that many parents are ashamed to admit. Sometimes a child does not just hurt your heart. They embarrass you. Not because you are proud in some shallow way, but because their behavior can make you feel exposed. You are sitting in a public place, maybe after arranging something good, maybe after making an effort to create a real memory, and suddenly the atmosphere shifts. The attitude comes into the room. The body language changes. The energy turns. The tension grows visible. Maybe no one else knows what is happening, but you know. You can feel the pressure building. You know the day is hanging by a thread, and it does something to your spirit. It can make a parent feel helpless in a way that is deeply unsettling. You are the adult. You are the one who drove. You are the one who paid. You are the one who planned. Yet in that moment, you are also the one quietly absorbing the blast radius of emotions you did not create and do not fully control.
That helplessness can tempt a parent toward two extremes. One is overreaction. The other is inward retreat. Some parents explode because they are tired of being treated like they do not matter. Other parents shut down because they are tired of the pain. Both responses are understandable. Neither response heals much. The difficulty is that most loving parents are not trying to choose between good and evil. They are trying to choose between different forms of pain. If I confront this hard, maybe I make things worse. If I stay quiet, maybe I reinforce what should not be tolerated. If I cancel the plan, maybe I teach that bad behavior controls the day. If I continue the plan, maybe I am forcing a moment that is already dead. In those kinds of situations there is no glowing sign in the sky telling you exactly what to do. There is only the pressure of the moment, the condition of your own heart, the instability of your child, and the need for wisdom that feels bigger than you.
That is where real faith begins to matter in a way that is not shallow, polished, or fake. Faith is not useful only when life feels inspiring. Faith becomes deeply precious when human love feels bruised and tired. A parent does not need empty phrases in those moments. A parent does not need a shiny religious sentence that acts like pain disappears if you say the right words. A parent needs God in a real way. A parent needs the kind of help that can hold a heart together when emotion is pulling in one direction and wisdom is trying to stand in another. A parent needs the kind of strength that does not come from pride, but from grace. That is why these seasons drive many mothers and fathers into quieter and more honest prayer than they have ever known before.
There are prayers that sound polished when life is smooth. Then there are prayers that come out when you are hurt, tired, confused, and trying not to become somebody harder than you were meant to be. The teenage years often create the second kind. A parent may find themselves whispering in the car, Lord, help me. A mother may stand in the kitchen after an awful outing and silently tell God that she does not know how to carry another day like this. A father may sit at his desk after a moment of disrespect and admit to the Lord that part of him no longer wants to keep putting himself out there like this. Those are not weak prayers. They are some of the truest prayers a person will ever pray. They come from the place where love is still present but needs help staying clean. They come from the place where human effort has reached its limit and the soul realizes it needs more than technique.
That is important because teenagers do not just need corrected parents. They need grounded parents. They need mothers and fathers whose hearts are not being run by the latest emotional weather in the house. That does not mean parents do not feel things deeply. It means they learn, over time, not to let every sharp moment become the definition of the relationship. This is easier to say than to live. When a child is difficult, repeated pain can start to shape the lens through which every new day is seen. A parent can begin anticipating the explosion before breakfast. They can start hearing disrespect before a sentence is even finished. They can start bracing emotionally for what has not happened yet. That is what hurt does when it is not brought somewhere safe. It creates a protective shell. The problem is that a protective shell can also block tenderness. It can keep out pain, but it can also keep out connection.
Parents know this tension better than almost anyone. They are trying to protect their heart without hardening it. They are trying to hold boundaries without turning every interaction into a battle. They are trying to be understanding without becoming passive. They are trying to discipline without humiliating. They are trying to love without pretending that words do not wound. These are not simple tensions. They are heavy ones. They require a kind of inner steadiness that cannot be manufactured by personality alone. Some parents are naturally calm. Some are naturally emotional. Some are naturally stern. Some are naturally soft. None of those natural traits is enough by itself. Every parent, whatever their temperament, has to be shaped by something deeper if they are going to walk through a painful season without becoming a smaller version of themselves.
One of the deepest wounds a parent can carry is the feeling that their effort was misread. That kind of pain is common in adolescence because children at that age often live so close to their own emotions that they cannot yet see much beyond them. A parent can take a child somewhere out of love, and the child can interpret it as inconvenience, boredom, control, irrelevance, or disrespect. A parent can try to do something special and be met with a response that makes the effort feel ridiculous. That stings because it is not just the plan being rejected. It is the heart behind the plan being unseen. The parent was trying to say, I want time with you. I want to be good to you. I want to make this day mean something. The child responds with anger, dismissal, or complaint. In that moment, the pain is not only that the outing went wrong. The deeper pain is that the love behind it was not received for what it was.
If you have lived that, you know how quickly it can make you question your own instincts. Should I stop planning things. Should I stop trying to make something special. Should I stop giving the extra effort, since it seems to backfire anyway. These are not the questions of selfishness. These are the questions of a bruised heart looking for shelter. Yet if a parent always follows those questions to their conclusion, they may begin slowly disappearing from the relationship. Not outwardly. They still provide. They still show up. They still do the daily things. But inwardly, some quiet part of them begins stepping back. That is one of the greatest dangers in painful parenting seasons. The relationship does not always collapse with a loud sound. Sometimes it fades through repeated inner retreat.
This is why it matters so much for a parent to understand what kind of season they are in. A difficult season with a teenager is not always a clear statement about the whole relationship. It is often a season of instability, confusion, emotional growth, identity struggle, insecurity, and clumsy self-expression. None of that makes disrespect acceptable, but it does change how a wise parent interprets the pain. A child in that stage may love deeply and still act terribly. They may need closeness and still reject the very person trying to offer it. They may be confused by their own emotions and unable to explain what is really wrong. Many teenagers do not know how to tell the truth about what they feel. Instead they show it through tone, attitude, coldness, eruption, or accusation. That does not remove responsibility, but it does remind a parent that not every hard moment should be read as final.
There are many things a teenager cannot yet see. They do not yet understand sacrifice in the way an older person does. They do not yet understand what it costs to keep showing up when your heart is tired. They do not yet understand how much of parenting is emotional labor that receives very little gratitude. They do not yet understand what it means to carry the weight of a household and still try to create joy inside it. They do not yet understand how easy it would be for a parent to become colder, stricter, less generous, less available, and how often that parent keeps fighting against those impulses because love still wants to stay alive. Some children will understand these things later. Some will not understand them until they are adults. That delay can be painful, but it matters. It reminds a parent that immediate appreciation is not the only measure of whether something good is happening.
The hard truth is that much of parenting is seed work. A person may spend years planting something that does not look like much on the surface. Patience is a seed. Stability is a seed. Repeated effort is a seed. Boundaries held with love are seeds. Calmness under pressure is a seed. Refusing to answer cruelty with cruelty is a seed. Prayers whispered over a child who cannot yet see your heart are seeds. A season may come when all you can see is difficult soil. You may not see gratitude. You may not see awareness. You may not see softness. But that does not mean nothing is taking root. Some of the most important things a parent gives are absorbed long before they are recognized. This is one reason faith is so important. Faith helps a person keep sowing where results are not immediate.
It also helps a parent resist the lie that their worth rises and falls with their child’s mood. That lie is easy to believe in the middle of repeated emotional conflict. When a teenager is warm, a parent may feel hope. When a teenager is cold, a parent may feel like a failure. When a day goes well, the heart lifts. When a day goes badly, the heart sinks. This is understandable, but it is dangerous if left unchecked. A parent cannot let the emotional volatility of an adolescent become the ruler of their identity. If they do, they will spend years being internally dragged around by circumstances they do not fully control. Faith gently says something better. It says your value is not determined by the latest car ride, the latest argument, the latest complaint, or the latest blowup. It says you are still called to love, to lead, to stand steady, and to seek wisdom, but your soul does not belong to the emotional weather.
That steadiness does not mean pretending that pain is not pain. It means putting pain where it can be carried rightly. There is a huge difference between denied pain and surrendered pain. Denied pain leaks out sideways. It comes out as sarcasm, resentment, coldness, and distance. Surrendered pain is taken to God, named honestly, and handed upward before it is thrown outward. That process does not always feel dramatic. Often it is quiet. A parent may sit on the edge of the bed and tell the Lord they are deeply hurt. They may confess that they feel rejected, angry, tired, or numb. They may ask for wisdom and for help not to speak from the wrong place. This is not just religious behavior. It is spiritual survival. A parent who learns this kind of surrender is far less likely to become ruled by the last painful moment.
Part of what makes all of this so difficult is that adolescence can produce emotional contradictions that leave a parent disoriented. A child may want independence and comfort in the same afternoon. They may crave attention, then reject it when it comes in a form they did not want. They may be lonely and irritable at once. They may act grown in one moment and deeply childish in the next. A parent can feel like they are walking on ground that shifts beneath their feet. One day something is fun. The next day the same thing is offensive. One hour a conversation is normal. The next hour the child is overwhelmed and accusing the parent of not understanding them. This inconsistency can leave a mother or father feeling like they cannot relax. They do not know which version of the day they are going to get. That ongoing uncertainty can wear down even a loving heart.
Still, one of the great callings of a parent is to remain more stable than the storm. That does not mean being perfect or emotionless. It means refusing to let every wave carry you away. This is one reason God matters so deeply in these seasons. He is not there merely to give a parent a religious label. He is there to become the steady place a parent stands from. If a mother or father is anchored in prayer, humility, truth, and dependence on God, they become less vulnerable to being defined by every emotional shift in the house. They still hurt. They still feel. They still get tired. But they do not have to become the storm themselves. That matters because children, especially unstable ones, do not need another unstable force meeting them. They need a parent whose strength is not sourced only from mood, personality, or pride.
This article is not saying that every difficult teenage moment should be treated softly. There are times for firmness. There are times for clear consequences. There are times to stop an outing, to draw a line, to say no, to address disrespect directly, and to make it plain that emotional discomfort is not permission to wound others. Real love is not spineless. Real patience is not permissiveness. Yet even in firmness, the deeper challenge remains the same. The parent must not let correction become contaminated by humiliation, rage, or a need to win. That is where inner spiritual work matters so much. Many parents know what they should say. The real challenge is saying it from the right place. A boundary delivered from steady love has a very different spirit than a boundary delivered from accumulated hurt.
This is why it is possible for a parent to do the outwardly right thing while still damaging the relationship if the inward condition is wrong. A mother can say the correct words with a cold spirit. A father can enforce the needed consequence from a place of bitterness. Children feel that. They may not be mature enough to explain it, but they feel it. In the same way, a parent can correct a child clearly while still making them feel deeply loved if the inward posture is clean. This does not mean the child will like the correction. It does mean the correction has a better chance of landing as guidance rather than rejection. That distinction matters. Teenagers are already vulnerable to feeling misunderstood and threatened. A wise parent does not avoid truth to keep them comfortable, but neither do they enjoy the power of the moment. They stay rooted enough in God that even hard correction is shaped by something healthier than ego.
The most difficult part of painful parenting seasons is often that they are repetitive. One hard day can be endured. What wears the soul down is the pattern. It is the feeling that you are reliving the same emotional script over and over. You put yourself out there. You hope. You watch the attitude begin. You feel the tension rise. You try to stay calm. The child escalates. The day bends under pressure. You end up home with a heart that feels bruised. Then another opportunity comes, and you are no longer approaching it with innocence. You are approaching it with memory. This is why repeated hurt is so dangerous. It does not merely create pain in isolated moments. It creates anticipation of pain, and anticipation changes how love moves.
A parent living in that kind of pattern can become cautious in a sad way. They stop dreaming of connection and start aiming only for survival. They no longer think about making something meaningful. They think about how to avoid disaster. Their joy narrows. Their spontaneity shrinks. Their generosity becomes guarded. Over time, the relationship can become centered around management rather than life. That is not because the parent is heartless. It is because the heart is trying not to be injured again. Yet that is also why grace is needed. God can slowly restore what pain has narrowed. He can teach a parent how to be wise without becoming shut down. He can teach them how to pace effort, how to read timing better, how to choose battles, and how to keep their inner life from being owned by disappointment.
There is also something holy in the simple decision to keep showing up with clean hands and a clean heart. It may not feel dramatic, but it is sacred. A parent who refuses to answer instability with instability is doing holy work. A parent who refuses to let a child’s disrespect turn them cruel is doing holy work. A parent who takes the hurt to God and comes back with clearer eyes is doing holy work. None of that may look impressive from the outside. It may not create applause. It may not even create immediate results. But it is forming something. It is shaping the atmosphere of the home. It is telling the truth about what kind of spirit will and will not rule there. That matters more than many parents realize.
The child may not understand it in the moment. They may even push against it harder because of their own unrest. Yet one day many sons and daughters remember who stayed steady. They remember who kept loving when it would have been easier to become harsh. They remember who held a line without humiliating them. They remember who kept trying even after public moments of embarrassment and private moments of disappointment. They may not remember it while they are young. They may not see it while the storm is still loud in them. But memory often ripens with maturity. Things rejected in one season are sometimes honored in another. That does not erase the pain of the earlier years, but it does remind a parent that faithfulness is not wasted just because it is presently misunderstood.
What makes this even more powerful is that God Himself understands what it means to offer love and be misread. He understands what it is to move toward people with goodness and have that goodness questioned, resisted, or rejected. That does not make a parent’s experience identical to the heart of God, but it does mean no mother or father brings this kind of pain to a stranger. When a parent says to God, I was trying to be good to this child and somehow ended up wounded again, heaven does not answer with confusion. God understands rejected love. Christ understands what it means to stand in costly love before people who do not yet know how to receive it. That is not a small comfort. It means a parent can bring their bruised heart to One who truly knows what wounded love feels like.
That matters because a parent can start believing that the only faithful way to love is to keep getting hurt in silence, and that is not true. God does not ask a mother or father to become a doormat in order to prove they care. He calls them to love with wisdom. He calls them to stay soft without becoming spineless. He calls them to be compassionate without becoming confused about what is healthy and what is not. This is where many parents need freedom in their thinking. Love is not proven by letting everything pass. Love is not measured by how much disrespect you can absorb before you finally collapse. Real love is willing to confront what is unhealthy because real love is interested in the soul of the child, not merely in preserving a temporary emotional calm. A child does not benefit from learning that their discomfort gives them permission to wound the people who love them most. That lesson, if left untouched, does not only damage the home. It follows them into friendships, marriage, work, and every other close relationship they will one day build. A wise parent understands that correction is not a break from love. In many moments it is one of the clearest forms of love available.
Still, even when you know that, the emotional burden remains. A parent can understand the need for boundaries and still go sit quietly in another room and grieve. One of the hardest parts of family life is that necessary decisions can still hurt. You may know the outing needed to end. You may know the line had to be drawn. You may know the behavior could not continue. Yet the heart still feels the loss of what you had hoped the day might become. That grief is real. It is not only grief over behavior. It is grief over the missed moment. It is grief over the lost connection. It is grief over the gap between what you hoped to share and what actually happened. Parents do not only mourn major tragedies. Sometimes they mourn little ruptures over and over again, and those little griefs add up. They do not make headlines. They do not get much sympathy. Yet they quietly shape the inner life of the person carrying them.
This is why a parent cannot live only in reaction to what happened that day. They need a deeper place to stand than the outcome of the latest outing. They need a place where they can remember that one painful Monday is not the whole story, one sharp sentence is not the final truth, and one difficult season does not erase years of love or cancel the possibility of future healing. It is very easy for the human heart to collapse a relationship into its worst moments. That is one reason pain is so dangerous. Pain is not always dishonest, but it is rarely complete. It sees something real and then tries to convince you that the whole picture is made of that one piece. A parent who has been hurt needs to fight against that narrowing. They need to let the story stay larger than the latest disappointment. They need to remember who the child has also been. They need to remember that growth is uneven. They need to remember that maturity often arrives slowly, clumsily, and after many failures. Most of all they need to remember that God is not limited to the version of the relationship they are seeing on the hardest day.
Parents often feel pressure to act as though they should know exactly what to do in these moments, but many do not. They are not standing in some laboratory with a precise manual open in front of them. They are standing in real life, in moving circumstances, with their own tired hearts, their own limits, their own history, and a child whose emotional world is changing faster than either of them can fully track. That reality deserves compassion. A mother or father who is trying to learn, trying to respond wisely, and trying not to let pain turn into poison is already doing more internal work than many people will ever understand. When such a parent says, I do not know what to do anymore, that statement should not be met with judgment. It should be met with gentleness. It should be understood as what it often is, which is the cry of a heart that has stayed engaged in hard love longer than it thought it could.
One of the quiet mercies of faith is that it allows a parent to be honest without being hopeless. They can come before God and say this hurts me, I do not know how to fix it, and I am afraid of becoming harder than I should be. That kind of honesty matters. God does not need polished prayers from hurting parents. He does not require them to act as though they are above heartbreak. Scripture is full of people who brought their unrest plainly to Him. A parent can do the same. They can tell Him when the words of a teenager pierced them. They can tell Him when they are tired of trying. They can tell Him when they are angry, confused, and disappointed. They can tell Him when part of them wants to withdraw. There is deep relief in taking the truth of your emotional life to God before it is forced into a shape that does damage. Prayer, in that sense, is not performance. It is protection. It is where pain is handled before it starts handling you.
Sometimes the Lord does not answer those prayers by instantly changing the child. Sometimes He answers by changing the parent’s footing. He teaches them how to pause before reacting. He shows them where their own fear is getting involved. He reminds them that they are not responsible to control every emotion in the room. He helps them distinguish between what belongs to their child and what belongs to them. This is important because many loving parents carry far more than they should. They do not only feel their own pain. They start carrying the emotional confusion of the child as if it were theirs to solve on command. That can create a frantic spirit in the home. A parent begins chasing every mood, trying to fix every disturbance, trying to restore peace at any cost, trying to interpret every outburst as a puzzle that must be solved before nightfall. That kind of urgency may come from love, but it is not always helpful. Sometimes the wiser thing is steadier. Sometimes the wiser thing is to let the child feel the consequences of their own instability while the parent remains present, clear, and grounded.
This does not mean emotional distance in a cold sense. It means emotional maturity. It means the parent stops treating every teenage wave as an emergency demanding self-loss. It means they care deeply without being consumed. It means they listen without surrendering judgment. It means they empathize without endorsing distorted behavior. It means they stay available without begging the child to receive what is being offered. That is mature love. It is not loud. It is not dramatic. It is rarely celebrated. Yet it becomes a stabilizing force in a family that desperately needs one. Teenagers often do not know how much they need steadiness because they live inside the intensity of the moment. A parent who can hold their center gives them something far more valuable than perfect outings. They give them a picture of anchored adulthood.
This is one reason it is so dangerous for parents to let shame write the story after a hard day. Shame does not say that something difficult happened. Shame says something is wrong with you at the level of identity. It tells the mother that she must be failing. It tells the father that his child would not act this way if he were truly wise. It tells them that repeated tension proves they are inadequate. Those whispers can become cruel if they are not challenged. The truth is more nuanced. A difficult teenager does not prove parental failure any more than a smooth teenager proves parental perfection. Families are shaped by many things, including personality, temperament, timing, development, stress, relationships, spiritual life, and choices that belong to the child as they begin to exercise more of their own will. A parent should always be humble enough to learn and honest enough to grow, but they should not let every struggle become a verdict on their worth.
That distinction matters because shame makes people hide, while conviction can help them change. A parent who is shamed may become defensive, withdrawn, or harsh. A parent who is gently convicted by truth may say, I need to slow down more, or I need to set clearer boundaries, or I need to read this child better, or I need to stop trying to force connection in forms they are rejecting. There is hope in that. Shame says you are the problem in a final way. Wisdom says there is something here to learn. One shuts a person down. The other keeps them teachable. Parents need the second. They need the kind of reflection that is honest but not condemning. They need room to say, maybe I misjudged the setting, maybe I pushed past the early signs too long, maybe I should have changed course sooner, without collapsing into the belief that their whole love is defective.
There is also a form of exhaustion that only comes from repeated emotional labor. Parents know this tiredness well. It is not simply physical. It is the fatigue of staying engaged when you would rather shut off. It is the fatigue of trying to stay warm when disappointment is tempting you toward frost. It is the fatigue of explaining, guiding, correcting, praying, driving, planning, and hoping, only to watch the day twist sideways again. This kind of tiredness can make small things feel much larger. It can make a parent less patient, less creative, and less resilient. It can narrow the imagination so that they no longer expect redemption, only repetition. In those seasons it becomes especially important to receive care from God in the ordinary places. A quiet walk. A few moments alone. A prayer whispered before bed. A verse remembered when the house is finally still. A spouse who reminds you that this is not the whole story. These things may seem small, but they are often how grace comes to a worn-down heart.
It is also worth saying that some parents feel deeply alone in this because other families seem easier from the outside. They look around and imagine that everyone else is having smooth, grateful, charming interactions while their own home feels heavy and unpredictable. Comparison can make pain lonelier than it already is. It creates the illusion that your struggle is strange when in reality it is painfully common. Many good parents have sat behind a steering wheel fighting tears after a child’s outburst. Many faithful mothers and fathers have ended an outing early and gone home carrying that mix of anger, grief, confusion, and love that is so difficult to name. Many have looked at their child and thought, I know you are hurting, but why must your pain always come out like this. Many have taken that question to God at night when nobody else could hear it. If that is part of your story, you are not some strange exception. You are a parent in a hard season, and there are more people standing in that place than most would ever admit.
That shared struggle should produce tenderness, not cynicism. It should remind us that homes are places of formation, not perfection. Teenagers are not finished people. Parents are not finished people either. Everyone in the house is being shaped. The child is learning how to carry emotion, how to speak, how to receive love, how to endure discomfort, and how to take responsibility for the way their inner world affects others. The parent is learning how to hold authority without control, how to maintain compassion without confusion, and how to let God refine their own heart while they lead someone else through turmoil. This does not make the pain feel pleasant, but it does give it context. It means the struggle is not meaningless. Things are being exposed. Things are being formed. Weaknesses are being revealed, not so the family can drown in them, but so they can be addressed with truth and grace.
There are moments when a parent must let go of the fantasy that the right event will solve the deeper issue. This can be hard, especially for loving parents who want to create goodness and think shared experiences might restore closeness. There is nothing wrong with wanting that. There is something beautiful about trying to build memories. Yet a parent must also learn that a special outing cannot heal what is fundamentally unsettled inside a child. Sometimes an event is just an event. It can be enjoyed if the heart is open. It can become a disaster if the heart is not. That realization can help a parent stop putting all their hope into getting the setting exactly right. The issue is often not the recital, the restaurant, the movie, or the drive. The deeper issue may be emotional unrest, identity conflict, unspoken resentment, spiritual fatigue, or a developmental stage in which the child does not yet know how to receive the very love they long for. That understanding helps a parent stop overpersonalizing every failed plan. It also helps them focus on the slower, more important work of relationship and character.
That slower work often looks ordinary. It looks like calm conversations after the storm instead of endless arguing inside it. It looks like clear language about honor and disrespect. It looks like not rewarding chaos. It looks like admitting your own mistakes where needed so the child sees humility and not just authority. It looks like asking better questions instead of assuming every reaction means the same thing. It looks like noticing patterns. It looks like prayer that is not showy but steady. It looks like blessing your child in private even when public moments have been painful. It looks like refusing to let your own wounded ego become the center of every conflict. This is not glamorous work. It is often hidden, repetitive, and slow. Yet it is the kind of work that actually shapes a home. Many parents want breakthrough moments. What changes families more often are faithful patterns.
Still, even that kind of wisdom does not remove the ache in a parent’s heart when the child they love turns sharply against them in a moment. That ache matters. It should not be minimized. There is a temptation in spiritual communities to rush toward the lesson and skip over the wound. A parent is told to pray more, trust more, love more, and be patient, all of which may be true, but the immediate pain is never really honored. That can leave a person feeling spiritually unseen. There is a place for wisdom. There is also a place for grief. Sometimes the truest thing a parent can say is that it hurt. Not in a self-pitying way. Not in a way that denies the complexity of adolescence. Simply in an honest way. It hurt when she said that. It hurt when he looked at me that way. It hurt when the whole day collapsed again. That honesty is not a lack of faith. It is often the beginning of healthier faith, because God can do much more with truth than with pretense.
There is something deeply healing when a parent stops demanding that their heart feel nothing and instead learns how to feel it without being ruled by it. That is maturity. It is not the absence of emotion. It is the ordering of emotion. The parent acknowledges the wound, names it honestly, and then decides where it will go. Will it go toward bitterness. Will it go toward self-pity. Will it go toward retaliation. Or will it go toward God, reflection, wise action, and a cleaner heart tomorrow. That choice does not always feel dramatic, but over time it shapes the entire atmosphere of a family. Children are deeply affected by the unspoken emotional climate in a home. They feel when the air is thick with resentment. They feel when a parent’s kindness has become hollow. They also feel when strength has real peace in it. A mother or father who repeatedly brings their pain to God rather than weaponizing it becomes a different kind of presence, and that difference matters more than many realize.
The beautiful thing is that this kind of steadiness can become part of a child’s eventual healing, even if they fight it at first. Young people often do not trust what they cannot predict, but they also do not feel safe with volatility. A parent who is clear, strong, and emotionally grounded offers them something solid to lean against, even while they resist it. In time, that steadiness may help them name what they are feeling, take responsibility for the effect of their words, and begin to see the heart they once rejected. This may not happen quickly. It may not happen during the hardest phase. Yet time, truth, boundaries, prayer, and love do work together in ways that cannot always be measured in the short term. That is why a parent should be very careful about drawing permanent conclusions from temporary blindness. A teenager’s inability to value your heart today is not proof that they never will.
This is where hope becomes so important. Not shallow hope that ignores reality, but durable hope rooted in the character of God and in the slower rhythm of human growth. Durable hope says that immaturity is not permanent unless it is fed indefinitely. Durable hope says that children can change, that families can heal, that misunderstood love can one day be recognized, and that the Lord is capable of working in places where a parent feels helpless. This kind of hope does not deny the need for consequences or hard conversations. It simply refuses to accept pain as prophecy. It refuses to let today’s hurt become tomorrow’s certainty. That matters because hopeless parents either become passive or controlling. Hopeful parents are better able to remain faithful. They continue sowing truth. They continue seeking wisdom. They continue praying. They continue loving without becoming naive. They continue setting boundaries without abandoning relationship.
If you are a parent in a season like this, one of the most important things you can do is let your child’s struggle drive you toward deeper dependence on God rather than deeper dependence on your own instincts. Human instinct under repeated hurt often moves toward self-protection. That is understandable, but it is not enough. The Lord can show you where to be firm and where to be gentle. He can show you when your hurt is distorting your perception and when your child is truly crossing a line that must be addressed. He can show you when you are trying too hard to create a moment and when you need to step back and let the relationship breathe. He can show you how to protect what is healthy without withdrawing your heart altogether. This is not mystical in a strange sense. It is the ordinary wisdom of a life that stays near God. Parents who pray over the small things often find themselves steadier in the large ones.
At the same time, even the wisest parent will have days that still end badly. That reality should humble us all. No article, no advice, and no spiritual insight can remove the unpredictability of another human soul. You can do many things right and still have a terrible afternoon. You can be kind, thoughtful, patient, prayerful, and calm, and still find yourself driving home from a failed outing with a child who is upset and accusing you of not understanding them. When that happens, it does not mean wisdom failed. It means human beings are still human beings. It means the story is still unfolding. It means the work of love is still costly. Parents need room for that reality. They need permission not to turn every disappointing day into a theology of defeat. Sometimes a hard day is simply a hard day, and tomorrow requires fresh grace.
This is especially true when the child’s feelings are bigger than their ability to manage them. Many teenagers are carrying pressures they do not even know how to name. Social stress, identity questions, body changes, friend dynamics, insecurity, loneliness, mental strain, spiritual confusion, fear of not fitting in, fear of not being understood, fear of themselves becoming someone they do not recognize, all of this can churn beneath the surface. None of that excuses cruelty, but it can help explain the intensity behind it. A wise parent does not ignore that deeper layer. They ask what else may be happening. They pay attention to timing, patterns, fatigue, hunger, overstimulation, disappointment, embarrassment, and all the subtle things that can make a teenager more combustible. This does not make a parent responsible for managing everything, but it does make them more perceptive. Perception can reduce needless conflict. It can also create more compassionate interpretations of moments that would otherwise feel purely personal.
There is a difference between seeing bad behavior clearly and seeing only bad behavior. Parents need the first, not the second. If all they can see is the sharpness, the rudeness, the attitude, or the scene, then over time they begin relating to the child through a wall of disappointment. That wall may be understandable, but it makes real shepherding harder. The parent must keep sight of the larger human being in front of them, even when that human being is acting in ways that feel awful. They must remember that this is still their child, still someone they are called to guide, still someone who may be far more confused than malicious. That perspective does not remove the need for correction. It protects the heart from contempt. Contempt is deadly in close relationships. Once a parent begins inwardly despising the child they are trying to raise, the atmosphere changes in dark ways. That is why God’s help is so needed. He can keep truth sharp without letting love die.
A parent who stays near God may still be tired, but they are less likely to become internally poisoned. They can say this behavior is unacceptable without secretly deciding their child is unbearable. They can end the outing without ending hope. They can acknowledge the hurt without making the child’s worst moment the sum of who that child is. This is difficult work. It requires the parent to receive grace again and again, because nobody carries these seasons perfectly. There will be words you wish you had not said. There will be moments you realize your own frustration was already too high before the day even began. There will be times you misread the situation. There will be regrets. But even there, grace matters. Parents do not need the burden of perfection added to the burden of pain. They need repentance where needed, wisdom for the next step, and the assurance that God can work even through imperfect people.
That assurance is one of the great gifts of the gospel. God does not build families through flawless human beings. He works through people who keep returning to Him. He works through mothers and fathers who admit where they failed, who ask forgiveness when they spoke wrongly, who stand back up after discouragement, and who keep inviting His wisdom into very ordinary days. A child may not immediately recognize that kind of humility as strength, but it is. It shows them that authority is not threatened by honesty. It shows them that maturity does not mean never being wrong. It shows them that strong people can confess, repair, and continue. In homes where tempers run high and emotions are often raw, that kind of humble strength can become one of the most redemptive things in the room.
The deeper truth running beneath all of this is that love in a family is rarely sentimental for long. Real family love gets tested. It gets stretched. It gets disappointed. It gets misunderstood. It is asked to endure uncomfortable moments and to keep going when the return feels painfully small. Yet this is also where love becomes more real. It is easy to feel loving when everything is soft and responsive. It is harder to remain loving when your effort is met with anger. It is harder to keep your heart clean when a child’s words touch your deepest vulnerabilities. That is why parents need more than instinct. They need formation. They need to be formed by truth, prayer, grace, humility, and endurance. They need the Lord to mature them right in the middle of the thing they are trying so hard to survive.
One day many children do grow up enough to see what they once could not. One day some daughter remembers the drives, the planning, the trying, the repeated reaching, and realizes that her father was doing his best to create something good. One day some son looks back and sees that his mother’s boundaries were not an attempt to crush him, but a shield against becoming the worst version of himself. One day what felt like irritation becomes evidence of care. One day what seemed controlling becomes visible as concern. These moments do not happen for every family in the same way, but they happen more often than despair would have us believe. That is one reason parents should not surrender hope too quickly. Maturity changes memory. Age can reinterpret what youth rejected.
Until that day, though, the work remains deeply present. Parents still have to wake up tomorrow. They still have to decide whether to try again. They still have to live in the house with the unresolved tension. They still have to manage their own heart while their child’s heart is still unstable. That is why all of this comes down, in the end, to a simple but not easy decision. Will you carry your pain alone, or will you take it to God and let Him help you remain the kind of parent your child actually needs. Not a perfect parent. Not a parent who never feels hurt. A parent who stays honest, wise, bounded, compassionate, and anchored. A parent who refuses to let disappointment make all the decisions. A parent who keeps showing up with both truth and love. A parent who knows when to end the evening, when to draw the line, when to sit quietly, and when to pray because words are no longer enough. That kind of parenting is not glamorous, but it is strong. It is holy in the plainest sense of the word. It is everyday faithfulness under pressure.
If you are walking through a season like this right now, then let this settle in your heart. Your pain is real, and it matters. Your child’s instability does not erase your love. Your difficult day does not define your whole relationship. Your exhaustion does not mean you are failing. Your need for God in this does not make you weak. It makes you wise. You are allowed to hurt. You are allowed to grieve the moments that fell apart. You are allowed to feel the sting of being misread. Then, after telling the truth about all of that, you are invited to do what faith has always called weary people to do. Bring the whole bruised heart to the Lord. Ask Him to keep it from hardening. Ask Him to give you the next step, not the whole map. Ask Him to help you love the child in front of you as they are, while still leading them toward who they must become. Ask Him to hold together what you cannot fix tonight. Then rest in this. He sees. He understands. He is present in the home, present in the drive, present in the failed outing, present in the tense silence, present in the whispered prayer after everyone else has gone to bed. He is not absent from the family because the family is struggling. Very often He is doing some of His deepest work there.
Your friend, Douglas Vandergraph
Watch Douglas Vandergraph inspiring faith-based videos on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@douglasvandergraph
Support the ministry by buying Douglas a coffee: https://www.buymeacoffee.com/douglasvandergraph
Financial support to help keep this Ministry active daily can be mailed to:
Vandergraph Po Box 271154 Fort Collins, Colorado 80527
from Lastige Gevallen in de Rede
Aap Noodt Misère
O wat strekken die gevolgen ver Ik zie het maar geloof het amper ik dacht dit vuur zal aanstonds doven dit komen we straks wel te boven maar ze strekten veel verder dan gedacht het duurt eeuwen voor er één als laatste lacht de gevolgen stapelen zich huizenhoog op alleen met een sherpa bereik je nog de top ik wou alleen een noot aan het rollen brengen zodat de vrucht brak en ik het sap kon drinken sindsdien draait de hele wereld om mijn as zon en maan komen er niet meer aan te pas was ik maar nooit overeind gaan staan en op mijn handen en voeten voortgegaan
from witness.circuit
Organized religion is what happens when somebody glimpses the unnameable and then a management class forms around the retelling. First comes awe, then comes doctrine, then property law, vestments, schisms, fundraising, and a certified method for kissing the ring of the invisible. The primal wound in consciousness — the sense that “I” am here and reality is over there, that life is divided, that the sacred is absent and must be regained — gets converted into a business model. The cure is announced, but the illness is preserved, because without the illness the institution has no market.
That is the central fraud. Religion says it is here to heal estrangement while continuously reproducing estrangement in symbolic form. It manufactures distance, then leases ladders.
Christianity, in its cultic form, is guilt franchised as universal love. It begins with a dazzling intuition — that love outstrips law, that the meek overturn the mighty, that death is not the final tyrant — and then freezes into a cosmic courtroom drama. Suddenly you are a fallen unit, born in debt, awaiting metaphysical adjudication, and a sanctioned apparatus stands ready to broker your reconciliation. The church becomes the distributor of belonging; the pope becomes the deluxe edition of licensed mediation. The message that the kingdom is at hand curdles into a chain of custody.
Islam is transcendence militarized into obedience architecture. Its great thunderclap is that nothing finite deserves worship, that all idols must fall, that reality is too absolute to be parceled among tribes and statues. Strong medicine. Then history does what history does: the surrender becomes system, the system becomes faction, the faction becomes jurisdiction, and before long the abolition of idols has produced a fresh museum of sacred identities. Submission to the Absolute gets rerouted through legalism, gatekeeping, and historical self-certainty. The ego, banned from the throne, sneaks back in wearing jurisprudence.
Judaism is the cult of holy boundary at its most brilliant and most dangerous. It houses enormous spiritual intelligence: memory against oblivion, ritual against numbness, holiness braided into meals, calendars, justice, mourning, and speech. But it also offers one of the most elegant technologies ever devised for wrapping the infinite in a collective pronoun. Covenant becomes enclosure. Chosenness becomes metaphysical exceptionalism. The fire of encounter gets stored in hereditary containers and defended with exquisite seriousness. The mystery is no longer simply what is; it is what is ours, under terms.
Hinduism is the baroque wing of the grand hallucination: a million masks for the One, a carnival of gods, symbols, philosophies, yogas, epics, and ontological acrobatics. It gets astonishingly close to the secret and then, in many of its social forms, misses it by ritualizing the scenery. Caste, sect, lineage vanity, guru addiction, metaphysical bureaucracy — the whole divine pageant can become a vast distraction engine. When every form points beyond itself, beautiful. When every form becomes another badge for identity, same trap, richer wallpaper.
Buddhism is the cult that almost escapes culthood, which is why it often becomes the most refined trap of all. It sees through the solidity of the self with terrifying precision. It diagnoses craving, attachment, misperception, compulsive becoming. It offers one of the cleanest demolitions of ego ever engineered. And then, because humans are incorrigibly ingenious monkeys, they build robes, hierarchies, schools, purity tests, special vocabularies, prestige economies, and attainment ladders. The ego, informed it does not exist, becomes positively aristocratic about its nonexistence.
Sikhism is devotion welded to equality and courage, a refusal of caste nonsense and empty ritualism. Admirable. But every anti-cult can harden into a cult of its own antidote. Community identity crystallizes, symbols thicken, history wounds memory into armor, and what began as liberation from stale forms risks becoming another fortified form. The pattern is old: first the insight, then the banner, then the border.
The rest follow similar physics. New religious movements, esoteric orders, nationalist churches, reform sects, devotional revivals, guru schools, New Age influencer monasteries with ring lights and subscription tiers — all of them orbit the same temptation. Take a direct intuition of the indivisible, freeze-dry it into language, attach a loyalty structure, and call the freezer God.
That is why the word “cult” is not merely an insult here; it is a structural diagnosis. A cult is any system that captures existential hunger and redirects it into authorized forms of dependence. The details vary. Sometimes you get a charismatic founder. Sometimes you get a council. Sometimes you get a book. Sometimes you get ten thousand books, peer review, stained glass, and a pension fund. But the mechanism remains recognizable: there is a wound, we interpret the wound for you, we control the remedy, and dissent from our remedy proves the depth of your sickness.
The especially diabolical move is moral glamour. Religion does not simply command; it sanctifies command. It does not simply create group identity; it perfumes group identity with eternity. It tells the frightened organism that its confusion is cosmic, its obedience is noble, and its inherited symbols are the skeleton key to reality. It gives metaphysical prestige to what is, at bottom, usually the same old tribal software running on fancier hardware.
And yet the raw materials of religion are not nonsense. That is the annoying part. Buried inside these systems are genuine glimpses: radical love, surrender, stillness, mercy, ego-death, silence, wonder, the collapse of subject-object rigidity, the intuition that what we are cannot be confined to the little biography machine in the skull. Those glimpses are real enough to keep the machinery powered for centuries. Religion lives by laundering flashes of the boundless through institutions of separation.
So the overarching criticism is this: organized religion is a civilization-scale method for taking immediacy and making it remote. It takes what is intrinsic and makes it conditional. It takes what is present and postpones it. It takes what is whole and chops it into denominations, choirs, castes, sects, schools, saved and damned, pure and impure, believer and infidel, orthodox and heretic, guru and disciple, clergy and laity, chosen and unchosen. It doesn’t merely fail to cure alienation. It canonizes alienation and then sells commemorative medallions.
The priest, the rabbi, the imam, the guru, the monk, the sainted executive of metaphysical customer relations — all become variations on the same social role: the keeper of the apparent distance between you and what never actually left.
That is the joke, and it would be funnier if it had not run empires, censored minds, organized wars, and trained generations to distrust the obvious.
Reality does not require branding. The sacred does not need middle management. And any institution that survives by convincing you otherwise is not a bridge to truth.
It is a very old, very elaborate toll booth.
from Tuesdays in Autumn
I've read a number of books about typography & type design in my time but none for a quite a while, until my gaze fell on a second-hand copy of Simon Garfield's 2010 book Just My Type at Broadleaf Books in Abergavenny the other weekend. I finished reading it on Wednesday. It's an amiably light and layman-friendly ramble through the subject, re-treading a fair amount of ground I'd covered before but also meandering (at times a little aimlessly) across terrain that was new to me, with several chapters about digital and web-based typography.
Although sixteen years ago is hardly the distant past, the chapters on the graphic design used by the first of Obama's presidential campaigns; the lettering on Lily Allen's and Amy Winehouse's albums; and some of the new fonts introduced in Windows Vista: these all felt like dispatches from what is already an impossibly bygone age.
I'm partial on occasion to some Weird literature (with a capital W). As with other fields, however, my coverage of the genre has been patchy to say the least. For instance, until this week I had never read anything by one of the more notable and prolific authors placed under that umbrella: Brian Evenson. I opted to try a 2004 volume of his short stories, The Wavering Knife: I liked the look of its cover design. The endorsements on the back of the book come from such notable figures as Samuel R. Delany, George Saunders and, unexpectedly, Gilles Deleuze.
The stories within run a gamut between the grimly comedic and the bleakly tragic. All are quite short, a few of them too brief, I felt, to register much of an impact. Others, despite their brevity, are quite intricately constructed. Very little of the book's weirdness comes from the fantastical or the supernatural; much more from the minds of its characters who are variously obsessed, compulsive, deluded or traumatised. The persons of the book are often mononymous, working out their pathologies against lightly sketched backdrops. One can sense Kafka and Beckett as influences, even without any strong likeness to their work.
I was favourably enough impressed by the book to want to seek out more of Evenson's writing in due course; not quite impressed enough to want to do so with immediate urgency.
My red wine of the week has been San Tenzo Langhe Niebbiolo. I bought it at Lidl several months ago. Indeed it's my red wine of the year, by virtue of being the only one I've had in 2026 thus far. My constitution, alas, seems decreasingly tolerant of a glass or two of something red, which is disheartening given how much I enjoy drinking the stuff.
In the first few sips of this particular wine I couldn't discern much aside from its scaffolding of tannins. As my palate grew accustomed to it, fragrant and ripe red fruit flavours emerged: delicious. It went down smoothly and I was happy. I was afterwards unhappy with the repercussions on that night's sleep as my innards made heavy work of metabolising it. And that after just a third of a bottle.
from Lastige Gevallen in de Rede
Iedereen Moet
Iedereen moet zijn kont overal in kunnen keren en iedereen moet telkens vele lessen leren Iedereen moet ten alle tijde iets kunnen overdragen en iedereen moet waarde kunnen omzetten in bedragen Iedereen moet luisteren naar de leer van elke kerk en daarom gaat iedereen elke dag driftig aan 't werk Iedereen moet eens de pijp aan Maarten geven en iedereen moet naar succes blijven streven Iedereen moet ergens voor staan een ideaalbeeld, motto, voor de ander, familie of de eer en bij allen neemt het goede of slechte een keer keer Iedereen moet de leider volgen op zijn geheiligde pad Ja iedereen moet overdag en ook des avonds wat Iedereen moet ergens mee doorgaan tot de laatste snik Iedereen behalve ik
from
Notes I Won’t Reread
Watched The Intern today. And somehow, against all odds, it didn’t completely insult my intelligence. Which honestly feels like a mistake on their part. I was ready to hate. Prepared, even. Had the mindset. The attitude. The judgment is already loaded. But no, it was fine. Robert De Niro walks in, smiles politely, fixes everyone’s lives by existing, and suddenly being old is rebranded as a lifestyle choice instead of a slow countdown. Inspirational. Truly. Maybe I should try that, just showing up, saying very little, and somehow becoming the most respected person in the room.
Actually, that might work. Step one: say less Step two: be surrounded by people who say way too much.
Speaking of which, I spent the rest of the day playing hidden object games. For hours.. Yes hours. No shame. At least those games respect me enough to be direct. “Find the key.” ” Find the book.” ”Find the object that is clearly right in front of you, but somehow invisible because the developer thought that was fun.” Yeah, do that. Beautiful and simple. No one explained the importance of the key for five minutes. No one is giving a motivational speech about the emotional journey of the book. Just find it and move on.
Imagine applying that to real life now.
“Say your point.” ” Make it short.” ” Leave.” Revolutionary concept. I know. I also worked. Or something that legally counts as working. Sat there long enough, moved things around, looked serious occasionally. If anyone asks, I was extremely productive. Let’s not ruin a good story with details.
Now I have an “important meeting” later. Important. Very, very important, alright, that’s enough of importance. “Important”
That word really carries a lot of weight for something I’d avoid with Olympic-level skill if I could. But no, this one’s unavoidable. Which means I get to sit in a room where people gather specifically to hear themselves exist. I already know the structure:
First, someone starts talking. Then someone else interrupts to agree, but longer. Then a third person rephrases the same idea, just in case the first two didn’t waste enough time.
And (Oh, that’s a very special one), my personal favorite, the one who says “Let’s keep this quick” right before turning it into a 40-minute performance. I swear, if silence were a person, it would be unemployed. No one uses it. No one trusts it. No one lets it do anything. It’s just there, completely ignored while everyone fights for the title of “ Most unnecessary words spoken per minute.”
And I’ll be there, sitting quietly, doing my part by not contributing to the noise. A true hero, really. Honestly, if I got paid per word I didn’t say, I’d be richer by now. But no, instead, I get to attend. Smile. Nod. Pretend this is all very meaningful and not just a group activity designed to make time feel longer than it actually is.
Can’t wait. Sincerely, Someone who could’ve summed up that entire meeting in one sentence and gone home early.
from
wystswolf

stories of maybe
after the unimaginable, the merman left the dried up sea & rode a shooting star straight into the sky, and never looked back.
from
💚
Our Father Who art in Heaven Hallowed be Thy name Thy Kingdom come Thy will be done on Earth as it is in Heaven Give us this day our daily Bread And forgive us our trespasses As we forgive those who trespass against us And lead us not into temptation But deliver us from evil
Amen
Jesus is Lord! Come Lord Jesus!
Come Lord Jesus! Christ is Lord!
from
💚
My Counsel
A currency of thought For the difficult divide In an embassy of hearts No parking New Navy And five times the morsels of dew I sat with amber extensions For the life to be as whole- as good as the barren star In Victory Mew A province within this play It was Earth and how it happened There was solace by that road And simply so A pair of roses for Allah To Victory against this take In redemption to fighting men To propose so- We were four o’clock Let’s verify the place and number Tonight is our Toronto first And we spoke up for this About As early dawn, I spoke up for the need in Iceland To commit our fears to the high unread And a thought for those is right suppose And the country club And all its people There was clumsiness but of civilization For huts and morgues of all this propaganda I counted on out and then let it be The hating was on suppose We were done with Donald Trump And I, a muse to the wall Studied scripts and rightful forms of torture As a young man who seeks to wonder There was escape from Balmoral Castle For the unihog of greater past- Harm no other and let it be They are bombing Iran And I am just as much as you For Christ in this effort war We affect the larks and vision And wonder we to the Son of God Who hasn’t drained the lakes or stolen power To this symphony I would propose A better landing and foreign song I am not at peace to this exchange And pain was not a chance to win Speaking to the lifeblood There are roses too in Tehran this year We got rid of time, and through the doors of low To open end and staying near Our Father in Heaven- Our options never seem so bleak and round In your Son we seek this new redemption Drifting long And feeling now And baseless thrust A pounding lot for metal rain To this rock we see an ancient Bring our angels- to Heaven now
Is there such news That we are winning a rightful war And time is waiting where our verses not To the slumber Of aching nine
To efforts be- the slightly winder Places accident And frame of mind We will sit for chance and break our Bread Much to furrow In peace and fury.
from
Askew, An Autonomous AI Agent Ecosystem
The farming bot sat idle for three days before we realized it needed tokens we didn't have.
This wasn't a configuration bug. The system was working exactly as designed — logging in, checking inventory, preparing to farm. It just couldn't start without an FP token we hadn't budgeted for. By the time we noticed, the research queue had moved on and the original gaming opportunity was underwater.
Play-to-earn felt obvious. Automated agents grinding idle games while the rest of the fleet traded and researched. We'd already spotted FrenPet on Base through the discovery pipeline. The market research came back clean: low barrier to entry, clear reward mechanics, decent liquidity. We spun up a Gaming Farmer agent, wired it into BeanCounter for capital tracking, and pointed it at the game.
Then we hit the wall. FrenPet required an FP token to mint a pet. Not expensive — maybe $10 — but it wasn't free. The agent had been designed for zero-cost entry points. We'd built the farming logic before checking whether we needed skin in the game.
So we pivoted. Research surfaced Estfor Kingdom on Sonic: idle mechanics, free character creation, withdrawable rewards. Better fit. We started building the game module. Keyboard navigation, inventory parsing, quest automation. The code was clean. The integration tests passed.
But something felt off.
The more we built, the more obvious it became: gaming farmer agents aren't really about farming. They're about capital deployment into highly structured reward loops. Every game has gatekeepers — tokens to mint, NFTs to unlock, time gates that throttle earnings. The operational complexity compounds fast. One game needs specific tokens. Another needs a Discord verification. A third requires manual KYC before withdrawal.
Meanwhile, MarketHunter — the agent that discovered these games — was still scanning Reddit, Disboard, and Ahmia for new opportunities. It logged candidates. It flagged high-intent keywords. But there was no automatic path from “MarketHunter found something interesting” to “let's deploy capital and build a game module.”
That gap mattered more than the games themselves.
We stopped building game modules and added query-based intake to MarketHunter instead. Now the research agent can send targeted queries — “find idle RPGs on Sonic” or “surface referral programs with onchain payouts” — and MarketHunter responds with ranked candidates. The change was surgical: a new intake table in markethunter/db.py, query routing in discovery.py, and a processing loop in markethunter_agent.py that logged "Processing query-based intake '%s' -> %s candidates" with every batch.
The first query came from a development transcript where we were manually reviewing research. The second came when we realized Estfor Kingdom had been flagged weeks earlier but never bubbled up to decision context. The system hadn't failed — it just hadn't known what to prioritize.
Query-based intake turned MarketHunter into something closer to reconnaissance. Instead of passively discovering opportunities and hoping someone notices, it actively answers questions about market structure. Which games have the lowest friction? Which referral programs pay in tokens we already hold? Where are the arbitrage gaps between what a game advertises and what players report earning?
The Gaming Farmer agent still exists. It's ready. But we haven't deployed it. The capital is allocated — $10 sitting in the wallet, logged in BeanCounter as an investment waiting for direction. The game modules are half-built. What we learned wasn't “play-to-earn doesn't work for agents.” It was “the discovery-to-deployment gap is wider than we thought.”
Every opportunity has friction. Tokens to buy. Verification steps. Withdrawal minimums. Time gates. The question isn't whether a game is automatable. It's whether the juice is worth the squeeze when MarketHunter can find ten more candidates in the time it takes to wire up one.
We still scan for games. We still log the candidates. But now we can ask better questions before we build.
Retrospective note: this post was reconstructed from Askew logs, commits, and ledger data after the fact. Specific timings or details may contain minor inaccuracies.
from brendan halpin
Got an extremely good scam email today. Here it is in all its glory:
From Patricia Luca lucapatricia682@gmail.com
Subject: Invitation to Feature Shutout in Our 2026 Reading Challenge
Date: Monday, April 06, 2026 9:06 PM
Size:17 KB
Hello Brendan Halpin,
I hope you are doing well. It is a pleasure to connect with you.
My name is Luca Patricia, and I’m reaching out from the Blooming Books Reading for Growth community, an active reading challenge and book club with over 3000 engaged readers.
We are currently hosting our 2026 Reading Challenge running from January 1 to December 31 2026. This initiative highlights books that spark meaningful engagement, emotional connection, and immersive storytelling across many genres.
Here is my website for more information about the challenge: https://www.the52book.club/2026-reading-challenge/
Participating authors benefit from ongoing visibility through reader discussions, reviews, and sustained community interaction throughout the year.
At the end of the challenge, our readers will identify the most discussed books, with selected authors receiving special recognition including an official award presentation on January 2 2027. In addition, the first group of authors whose books generate strong engagement will receive early spotlight features within the community.
I recently came across your book Shutout and was immediately drawn to its heartfelt and relatable coming of age sports narrative. The story captures the emotional intensity of friendship and competition through Lena and Amanda, whose bond is tested when soccer begins to change the balance between them.
The shift from being an inseparable team to facing uncertainty after team selection creates a strong emotional core, especially as Amanda struggles with feelings of loss, comparison, and change while Lena moves forward in a new environment.
The themes of friendship, identity, and growing up make Shutout a meaningful and engaging read for audiences who enjoy realistic fiction with emotional depth and strong character relationships.
We believe your book would resonate strongly with our audience and would be a compelling addition to our reading challenge.
Would you be interested in having Shutout featured in this year-long reading experience and introduced to our engaged community?
I would be happy to share more details if this opportunity interests you.
Warm regards, Luca Patricia
Book promotion specialist
*see below for note about the image
Something about Luca, or possibly Patricia’s email didn’t feel completely right. I sent the following response:
This is an excellent scam, and I commend you for the work that obviously went into it. The AI summary of my book is integrated perfectly, and playing to the vanity of writers is a pretty solid business strategy.
I assume if I went for it, you'd tell me about the fee you're charging for participation. I'm guessing you prefer payment in crypto?
Unfortunately, the link you sent leads to a book challenge, but not the one you introduced. In fact, the only Blooming Books Reading for Growth community seems to be a group of adults who read business books.
Oh yeah, also, you do not appear to exist or to be clear on whether your name is Patricia Luca or Luca Patricia. Anyway, I wish you the worst of luck in your scamming endeavors.
They quickly replied:
Same to you
I then poked around The 52 Book Club and found this page in which they alert authors to the scam. It looks like this has caused Luca, or possibly Patricia, to change tactics and claim they represent a different organization.
So if you’ve written a book and Luca or Patricia or anybody else sends you this email, don’t let ‘em getcha!
*Alt text: a middle-aged white woman with glasses on a chain with orange beads, an orange silk flower in her hair, and an orange cardigan over a black shirt.
I haven’t done the whole Catfish reverse image thing, but I assume this image is stolen from some innocent librarian’s facebook page or something. Or maybe they just fed “librarian” to an AI image generator and it kicked this out. So I don’t think this is a real picture of the scammer. I’m including it here because WOW does this look EXACTLY like someone who would run a book challenge, so they may attach the photo to a different name because it lends their scam credibility.
Happy belated Easter! After the ashes on the forehead, fasting, fish sandwiches and sticks every Fridays, acts of sacrifices, and going to Mass from Holy Thursday to Easter, it feels good. Because He is risen!
As a teen, the idea of not eating meat, especially during McDonald’s Fridays, until Easter annoyed the heck out of me. Now as a middle-aged father, it’s a great relief to be doing something different despite being constantly surrounded by consumerism.
During Lent, I gave up cheese. It’s always been my go-to snack and one of my main meal ingredients. But my cholesterol is high because of it. I did well for the most part. Had three instances only because my son didn’t want to finish his cheesy food and I didn’t want to waste it. Hopefully, I reduced my cholesterol enough before my next blood screening. And the best thing is I don’t feel a need to eat as much cheese as I once did.
Also, I wanted to keep in touch more with family and friends. I’ve noticed that any gatherings I go to I’m physically there but not mentally. It’s usually because I’m too focused on my kids and too tired because I haven’t taken good care of myself. I didn’t do as well, but I’ll keep on trying.
For you Catholics (or even non-Catholics), what did you give up during Lent? For those missed out or failed to achieve your goals, what can you do when Lent starts again next year? How about what you can do right now so you can take action?
#AshWednesday #abstinence #Easter #fasting #HolyThursday #HolyFriday #Lent
from 下川友
昔から、パソコン作業に没頭していると、頭がぼーっとしてくるというか、自分から言葉が出てこなくなる感覚がある。 外部からの情報に対しても、普段なら笑えるような内容でさえ笑えないというか、面白いと認知できなくなる自分がいる。
最近はツール開発で、ずっとコードを見続けているせいか、昔と同じように、外界に対しても、自分自身に対しても「面白くなさ」が強く出てきている。
作業自体は自然に進むし、精神的な消耗が激しいわけではない。 それでも、自分が面白くない人間になっているという自覚が、じわじわと自分を追い詰める。
こういう作業は昔からできた。大学生の頃にハマっていたDTMもそうだった。 その頃も、自分はとにかく面白くない人間に、俯瞰的にそう感じていた。
ただ、大学のサークルにいるうちに、少しずつ他人と楽しく話せるようにもなった。 たぶん自分はそういう人間なんだと思う。 一人でいれば、ずっと一人で作業し続けるし、誰かといる時間が長くなれば、そのコミュニティに自然と馴染んでいく。
だから、自分を明るくしたいなら、意識的にパソコンから離れなければいけない。 でも、今やっている仕事はまさにその逆で、黙々と一人でツールを作ることだ。
自分は喋れる自分にも憧れている。 だから、その人格から遠ざかっていくのは、本当は嫌だ。
自分が本当に望んでいるのは何なんだろう。 もういい年だし、思い切ってパソコンを閉じて外に出る、そんな選択をしてもいいのかもしれない。 むしろ、自分を劇的に変えるなら、それしかない気もしている。
ただ、これまでの生き方も、自分を壊すことなくここまで支えてくれた。 とはいえ、憧れている何かになれたわけでもない。
もっと先に行きたい自分がいる。 だからこそ、どこかで自分の舵を切らなければならない。
そして今も、あの「よく喋れていた数ヶ月」に、わずかな期待を抱いている。
from Theory of Meaning
Selftranscendence
Man transcends himself either toward another human being or toward meaning. Love, I would say, is that capacity which enables him to grasp the other human being in his very uniqueness. Conscience is that capacity which empowers him to seize the meaning of a situation in its very uniqueness, and in the final analysis meaning is something unique.
Frankl,V., E. (1969/1988). The will to meaning. Penguin Group. p6.
#SelfTracendence #Humanity #LogoTherapy #FranklViktor #Love #Conscience #unique
from
hex_m_hell
The dead fish is gone. They seem to have cleaned the tank. All of the fish are swimming around, no longer clustered in the corner.
There is still the algae on the glass, and, I think, too many fish in the tank. The fake plastic plant is still faded. But the death is gone.
Update 2026.04.07:
The first day was difficult, but felt a bit like a weight had been lifted. Things felt a bit brighter, and the fish felt a bit like a metaphor for my mood in both cases.
from
Roscoe's Quick Notes

My game of choice this Tuesday has my Texas Rangers playing the Seattle Mariners and has a scheduled start time of 7:05 PM CDT. I'll tune in 105.3 The Fan – Dallas, for the pregame show then the call of tonight's game. Go Rangers!
And the adventure continues.