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
Roscoe's Quick Notes

tonight comes from the WNBA, and has my Indiana Fever playing the Dallas Wings. This game has a scheduled start time of 6:00 PM CDT and will be broadcast on ION TV. I do intend to watch it. Go Fever!
And the adventure continues.
from
The Poet Sky
A is for ADHD I really struggle with order B is for borderline my newest personality disorder
C is for cure I neither have nor want one D is for depression that really sucks out the fun
E is for executive dysfunction I'm really trying, I swear F is for fine part of the mask that I wear
G is for general the type of anxiety I've got H is for health with which I struggle a lot
I is for identity you might need to ask who I am J is for just enough often the most for which I can plan
K is for knowledge please educate yourself L is for love something hard to give myself
M is for meds of which I have many N is for neurodivergent because I have different brain chemistry
O is for oppositional I struggle with commands P is for patient please be so with demands
Q is for quality a type of care that's hard to find R is for RX the meds that help stabilize my mind
S is for society that isn't always accepting T is for “the tism” of which not everyone is understanding
U is for unfortunate something my reactions sometimes are V is for visible which not all disabilities are
W is for willing which you must be to grow X is for... um... You know what, I don't know
Y is for you who is involved in this too Z is for zoo cos I'm not an animal, I'm a person too
#Poetry #MentalHealth
from My DAH Diary
A couple of memorable lines from “Ms. Mebel Goes Back to the Chopping Block” by Jesse Q. Sutanto
From Chapter 12: “Language is a gate to the world. It is a gate for your mind, and if that gate is broken, people think the mind is also not very bright.”
From Chapter 18: “His imperfections do not turn Mebel off; rather, they remind her that at the end of the day, they are all human and flawed, crashing into each other's lives by pure chance and enjoying each other's company when they can.”
from
Chemin tournant
Emmanuel Godo, poète et essayiste, avait consacré au Journal de la brousse endormie, paru en 2023, l’une de ses chroniques dans le journal La Croix.
Je viens de découvrir qu’il donne, dans la revue de culture contemporaine Études (numéro 4330, octobre 2025) quelques lignes à propos de Tout commence par les marimbas de la nuit.
En vue de plus tard ou de jamais, ces mots de Mallarmé dans une lettre adressée à Verlaine, ont pour E. Godo la vertu d’offrir à la poésie un vaste espace d’accomplissement, qui déborde les assignations à servir. Il est question, avec Mallarmé, Bataille et William Carlos Williams de l’horizon d’écriture de l’écrivain, du poète, dans cette chronique qui s’achève ainsi :
Dans Tout commence par les marimbas de la nuit, Serge Marcel Roche fait entendre une ode aux arbres, aux rivières, aux oiseaux et à ces hommes de l’Est-Cameroun auprès de qui il a vécu, qui “inventèrent la musique à l’écoute / À l’écoute des pluies / À l’écoute des gouttes”. Et, sans qu’il y ait à le justifier, comme si le mouvement d’émerveillement devant le paysage africain le dictait impérativement, la voix remonte aux profondeurs de l’enfance du poète : “Alors le temps n’était / N’était amour ni souffrance / Seulement l’odeur des lieux familiers”.
Là-bas, il semble qu’il existe une enfance qui parle à toutes les enfances. Le poète est cet homme qui a appris à ne plus être protégé par aucune certitude, aucune écorce du savoir présent. Il vibre, résonne, s’accorde à toutes les manifestations de la source première. La bonne nouvelle que porte la poésie, à jamais, est qu’un jour l’homme existera, qu’il portera visage radieux, cœur intelligent et main fraternelle. La poésie tient bonne garde de cette promesse jamais réalisée.
Cette chronique est disponible à la lecture dans son intégralité : En vue de plus tard ou de jamais.
#Hyperliens
from Douglas Vandergraph
Before the heat rose from the pavement and before the first train carried tired faces along Apache Boulevard, Jesus was already in prayer. He knelt in the quiet near Tempe Town Lake while the sky held that thin gray color that comes before the desert starts speaking in light. The water moved softly beneath the bridges. A runner passed without noticing Him. A man pushing a cart slowed for a second, looked toward Him, and kept going because there was something about Jesus that did not feel strange and did not feel ordinary either. He was not hiding from the city. He was holding it before the Father.
Tempe was not asleep. It only looked that way from a distance. Behind apartment windows near Arizona State University, young people were waking with dread in their stomachs. Parents were checking bank apps before the day had even begun. Professors were staring at unfinished emails. Kitchen workers were already on buses. A woman in a third-floor apartment off University Drive sat on the edge of her bed with her shoes untied and one hand pressed against her chest because she had woken up with the feeling that she had forgotten how to breathe. She was not in danger. Nothing visible was wrong. That almost made it worse.
Her name was Leah. She was thirty-seven years old, though lately she felt older in the way people feel older when they have been carrying something no one else can see. She worked in student records at Arizona State, in an office where everyone knew how to sound kind and busy at the same time. She answered questions from students who were scared they had missed a deadline, parents who were angry about forms, and faculty who wanted a problem solved before lunch. She was good at it. She had become skilled at making her voice steady while her insides felt like a room with the lights flickering.
That morning, she had a meeting at nine with a student named Mateo who had already missed two appointments. She knew his file well because she had looked at it too many times. He was on academic probation. His financial aid had been flagged. His mother had called once, crying quietly and apologizing for crying. Leah had told her what she could and held back what privacy rules would not let her say. Since then, Mateo’s name had stayed in the back of her mind like an unpaid bill.
She did not want to care that much. Caring had cost her before. Tempe had taught her that people could stand close and still disappear from your life. The city was full of motion, full of students crossing Palm Walk and bikes leaning against railings and people laughing outside coffee shops near Mill Avenue, but loneliness still found places to sit. It sat beside her in the car. It sat across from her at dinner. It stood in the hallway when she came home and heard the refrigerator humming in an apartment that used to hold another voice.
Her husband, Daniel, had not died. Sometimes she thought that would have been easier to explain. He had left two years earlier after a long season of quiet damage, the kind no one at church noticed because they had stopped going before anyone could ask. There had been no huge scandal, no dramatic fight that people could point to as the moment everything broke. There had been bills, silence, resentment, and a thousand small refusals to be honest. One morning, he told her he could not keep pretending they were still married in any way that mattered. By that evening, his clothes were gone from the closet.
Since then, Leah had kept herself decent. That was the word she used in her mind. Not healed. Not joyful. Not free. Decent. She paid rent. She answered emails. She smiled at students. She watered the plant on the balcony even though half of it had gone brown. She drove to the Fry’s on Southern Avenue when she needed groceries and sometimes sat in the parking lot longer than necessary because she hated going home. On Sundays, she told herself she would try church again, but Sunday morning always arrived with a tiredness that felt too honest to fight.
She still believed in God, though she no longer knew what that meant. She believed the way a person believes there is a mountain beyond the buildings even when the dust hides it. She believed because unbelief felt too empty, but faith felt too painful. Prayer had become the place where she ran out of words and then felt ashamed for running out. She did not hate God. That would have required more heat than she had left. She was simply tired of feeling like every answer came wrapped in silence.
Jesus rose from prayer as the sun started to touch the edges of Hayden Butte. He looked toward the streets where the day was beginning to gather itself. There was nothing hurried in Him. He did not move like someone trying to cover ground. He moved like someone who knew where every hidden grief had taken shelter. A man sleeping under a thin blanket near the lake opened his eyes as Jesus passed. The man did not speak at first. He only watched Him with the guarded look of someone used to being ignored by people who wanted the city to look cleaner than it was.
Jesus stopped beside him. The man’s name was Earl, though he had not heard it spoken gently in a long time. He expected a question about whether he needed help. He expected a warning that he could not stay there. He expected pity, which felt worse than contempt when it came from people who needed to feel good about themselves before breakfast. Jesus gave him none of that. He looked at him with a steadiness that made Earl feel, for one strange second, like the morning had made room for him.
“You are cold,” Jesus said.
Earl gave a small laugh because the air was already losing its coolness. “Not for long,” he said. His voice was rough from sleep and from other things he did not name. “Arizona fixes that.”
Jesus stepped closer and sat on the low wall near him. He did not sit above Earl like a helper evaluating a problem. He sat near him like a man willing to share the same hour. Earl glanced away toward the water. The silence stretched, but it did not accuse him. That bothered him more than a speech would have. He had defenses ready for speeches. He had no defense for patient presence.
“You don’t have to sit here,” Earl said after a while.
“I know,” Jesus answered.
Earl looked back at Him. There was no edge in the answer. That made something in Earl tighten. He wanted to say something sharp and send this man away before the softness in the morning found a crack in him. Instead he picked at a frayed thread on his blanket and muttered, “Most people know that too.”
Jesus let the words rest. A cyclist went by fast, and a pair of students walked past with iced coffees, laughing about something on a phone. Earl watched them with a face that tried to show nothing. His daughter would have been about their age now if things had gone differently. He had not seen her since she was twelve. The last time he tried to call, the number had been changed. He told people he understood. He told himself he deserved it. Neither statement had made the ache smaller.
Jesus looked toward the bridge and then back at Earl. “You have been calling yourself what your shame named you,” He said.
Earl’s jaw moved, but no words came. He hated how direct it was. He hated that it did not sound cruel. Cruel words could be thrown back. True words had to be carried.
“I don’t know you,” Earl said, but his voice had less force than he wanted.
Jesus looked at him with a sorrow that did not weaken His authority. “I know.”
The city kept moving around them. The sun climbed. A bus sighed at a stop. Somewhere behind them, a truck backed up with a sharp repeating beep. Earl looked down at his hands. They were swollen at the knuckles. Once, those hands had repaired kitchen cabinets. Once, those hands had lifted his daughter onto his shoulders in a park. Once, those hands had signed forms he did not read carefully because he was too proud to ask questions. The memories came without permission. He blinked hard, angry at the brightness.
Jesus did not press him. He simply sat there until Earl whispered, “I’m not ready.”
“No,” Jesus said. “But you are not as far from turning as you think.”
Leah drove past the edge of campus twenty minutes later, late already and irritated at herself for being late. Traffic on Rural Road had slowed for no reason she could see. A student on a scooter cut too close in front of her car, and she hit the brakes harder than she needed to. Her coffee tipped in the cup holder and spilled over the console. She said a word she would not have said years ago, then immediately felt the old reflex of guilt, then felt angry at the guilt. That was how her mornings worked now. One small thing went wrong, and inside her there was a whole courtroom.
She pulled into the parking structure and sat for a moment with both hands on the wheel. Her phone buzzed. It was a text from her sister, Rachel, who lived in Chandler and had three children and a gift for sounding concerned in a way that made Leah feel managed. “Checking on you. Haven’t heard from you. Dinner this weekend?” Leah stared at the message until the screen dimmed. She did not answer. She loved Rachel. She also could not bear the kind of love that arrived with questions she did not have the strength to answer.
The walk across campus felt longer than it was. Tempe had a way of mixing youth and weariness in the same breath. Students moved with backpacks and headphones, while older workers pushed carts, cleaned glass, carried boxes, opened doors, and kept the machinery of the place running. Leah passed a group of freshmen taking pictures near a palm-lined walkway. Their faces were open in a way that made her chest ache. She remembered arriving in Tempe at nineteen with a used suitcase and a faith that felt simple. She had believed God had brought her there. She had believed life would unfold if she obeyed, worked hard, and married a man who said the right things about the future.
She did not understand how a person could become so careful and still lose so much.
In her office, the air conditioning was too cold. The fluorescent lights made everyone look a little unwell. Leah set her bag under the desk, cleaned coffee from her hand with a napkin, and opened her inbox. Thirty-four new emails. Two flagged urgent. One from her supervisor with the subject line “quick clarification,” which never meant quick. She looked at Mateo’s appointment on her calendar and felt a strange dread. Not because he would be difficult. Difficult students did not frighten her. It was the quiet ones that stayed with her. The ones who sat down already ashamed. The ones who apologized for needing help.
At 8:57, Mateo’s appointment still showed no check-in. Leah felt relief, then guilt for feeling relief. At 9:03, the front desk sent a message that he had arrived. She took a breath, smoothed her cardigan, and opened the door.
Mateo stood there with his backpack hanging from one shoulder and his eyes lowered. He was twenty, maybe twenty-one, with tired skin and the thin, wired look of someone who had been living on energy drinks and fear. He wore a faded ASU shirt under an open flannel, and his shoes were worn through at the outer heel. Leah noticed details like that. Her job taught her to read forms, but pain had taught her to read people.
“Mateo?” she said. “Come on in.”
He nodded and sat on the edge of the chair, not fully letting his weight settle. Leah pulled up his file, though she already knew what it said. There were holds, warnings, missing documents, and academic concerns stacked together in the clean language institutions use when a human life is starting to buckle. She kept her voice gentle and professional as she explained what needed to happen. Mateo listened without interrupting. His face barely changed. That worried her.
“There are still options,” she said. “But we need to move quickly.”
He nodded again. His hands tightened around the strap of his backpack. “Okay.”
Leah waited. “Do you understand what I’m saying?”
“Yeah,” he said. “I messed it up.”
“That’s not what I said.”
He looked at her for the first time. His eyes were red, but not from crying in the office. They looked like they had been red before he arrived. “It’s true, though.”
Leah felt something in her own chest react. She knew the tone. It was the tone of someone trying to punish himself before anyone else could. She had used it in her own head for two years.
“You missed deadlines,” she said carefully. “That is not the same thing as being beyond help.”
Mateo looked toward the window. Outside, students crossed the walkway as if their lives were not hanging by threads. “My mom thinks I’m doing better than I am,” he said. “She keeps telling everybody I’m the first one in the family to go here. She posts stuff. She saved my acceptance letter. She framed it. It’s on the wall in our apartment.”
Leah let her hands rest on the desk. “That is a lot to carry.”
He gave a short laugh that had no humor in it. “It sounds stupid when I say it.”
“No,” Leah said. “It sounds heavy.”
Mateo blinked fast. For a second she thought he might cry, but he swallowed it down with the practiced violence of a young man who had decided tears were dangerous in public. “I work nights,” he said. “Not every night. Just enough to be tired all the time. My little brother needs rides. My mom’s back is bad. I thought I could handle it. Everybody handles stuff, right?”
Leah did not answer quickly. There were things a professional could say, and there were things a person could say. She was never sure anymore where the line was. The office had policies. Pain had none.
“Everybody carries something,” she said. “But not everybody is carrying the same weight.”
Mateo looked at her again, and this time the guardedness in his face loosened a little. It was not trust yet. It was only the exhaustion of holding the door closed.
Jesus was walking along Mill Avenue by then, though no one recognized Him for who He was. The shops were opening. A man in a delivery vest stacked boxes near a restaurant door. A woman in scrubs waited at a crosswalk, rubbing her thumb over the face of her watch as if time itself had become a wound. Two students argued softly near a bike rack, not loud enough to draw attention but tense enough that anyone paying attention would feel the fracture between them. Jesus noticed all of it. He did not move through the city as if people were background to His purpose. The people were not interruptions. They were the reason He had come.
The woman in scrubs was named Tasha. She had just left an overnight shift at a care facility near Baseline Road and was on her way to catch the light rail because her car needed a repair she could not afford. She was forty-four, with sore feet and a tenderness she hid under efficiency. Her oldest son had stopped speaking to her three months earlier after a fight about money, respect, and the years she had missed because she was always working. She told herself he was ungrateful. She told herself she had done what she had to do. Both things might have been partly true, but they did not let her sleep.
Her phone buzzed in her pocket. She pulled it out, hoping it was him and ashamed of hoping. It was only a pharmacy reminder. She shoved the phone back into her pocket and looked up just as Jesus came to stand beside her at the corner.
The walk signal had not changed. Cars moved through the intersection, bright and impatient. Tasha glanced at Him once and then away. She was used to men trying to start conversations when she had no energy for them. But He did not speak. He stood beside her in a silence that did not take anything from her. That was rare. Most silence between strangers felt empty or unsafe. This silence felt like shade.
When the light changed, they crossed together. Halfway across, Tasha stumbled slightly on the curb. Jesus reached out and steadied her by the arm. He released her as soon as she had her balance.
“You are very tired,” He said.
She gave Him the look she reserved for patients who stated the obvious. “That’s what work does.”
“Some work tires the body,” Jesus said. “Some tiredness comes from grief that has not been allowed to speak.”
Tasha stopped just beyond the curb. People moved around them. Someone muttered under his breath because she had slowed the flow. She did not notice. Her face had gone still. She had spent years being practical. Practical people did not stop on Mill Avenue because a stranger named the thing they had been avoiding.
“I’m not grieving,” she said. “My son’s alive.”
Jesus looked at her with a compassion that did not let her escape the truth. “Yes.”
Her mouth tightened. That one word reached too deeply. She looked down the street toward the station, then back at Him. “I don’t know what you want me to say.”
“I am not asking you to perform your pain.”
That undid something in her. Not completely. Just enough that her shoulders dropped. She turned away and stared at the buildings because looking at Him made her feel too seen. “He said I chose everybody else over him,” she whispered. “I told him he had no idea what I sacrificed. I said things. He said things. Then he walked out.”
Jesus waited.
“I keep thinking he’ll call when he needs something,” she said. “That’s ugly, isn’t it? Waiting for your own child to need you so you don’t have to say you’re sorry first.”
Jesus did not shame her. He did not soften the truth either. “Love that waits for need before it moves has not yet become mercy.”
Tasha closed her eyes. She was too tired to argue, and maybe that was mercy too. The train bell sounded in the distance. She looked toward it, then back at Jesus. “I’m going to miss it.”
“You have missed more painful things than a train,” He said.
She almost smiled, but the grief rose too fast for that. She pressed her fingers against her eyes and took one shaky breath. “I don’t know how to start.”
“Start without defending yourself,” Jesus said.
The train arrived. The doors opened. People stepped off and on. Tasha did not move. For the first time in months, she pulled up her son’s contact and typed, “I was wrong to speak to you that way. I miss you. I am not asking you to answer right now.” She stared at the words. Her thumb hovered over send. Jesus stood beside her, not urging, not withdrawing. When she finally sent it, the train doors closed and the train pulled away without her.
She gave a small broken laugh. “There goes my ride.”
Jesus looked down the track. “Not everything you miss is a loss.”
Back in the office, Leah handed Mateo a printed checklist. She had written three items in the margin that were not required by the system but would help him survive it. She had also written the name of a person in financial aid who still answered calls like people mattered. Mateo stared at the paper as if it were more than paper.
“You need to go there today,” she said. “Not tomorrow. Today. If you get stuck, email me before four.”
He nodded. “Why are you helping me this much?”
The question caught her off guard. She almost gave the professional answer. Because that is my job. Because this office exists to support students. Because retention matters. Instead she looked at the tired young man in front of her and told a smaller truth.
“Because falling behind should not mean falling alone.”
Mateo looked down quickly. “My mom says stuff like that.”
“She sounds wise.”
“She believes in God,” he said. “Like really believes. I used to. Kind of. I don’t know.” He rubbed one hand over his face. “I think I’m scared He’s disappointed too.”
Leah felt the room narrow. She had not expected God to enter through a student appointment at nine in the morning. She had not expected to feel exposed by someone else’s sentence. She looked at her desk, at the stapler, the file, the university pen with fading letters. All the safe objects of a safe office. None of them could answer him.
“I think,” she said slowly, “that people who are scared God is disappointed usually care more than they realize.”
Mateo studied her. “Do you believe that?”
Leah heard the question beneath the question. She could have stepped away from it. She could have said she was not a counselor. She could have referred him to campus resources and kept herself clean. Instead she felt the ache of her own unanswered prayers and the old faith beneath them, not dead but bruised.
“I am trying to,” she said.
That was the most honest thing she had said in months. Mateo seemed to understand the cost of it. He folded the checklist carefully and slid it into his backpack.
“Thanks,” he said. “For not acting like I’m just a file.”
After he left, Leah closed the door and sat very still. The office sounds continued around her. Phones rang. Someone laughed near the copier. A printer jammed and beeped in angry little bursts. Leah stared at the chair where Mateo had been sitting. She had spent two years trying not to feel her own life, and somehow this student had walked in with his exhausted face and pulled a thread loose.
Her phone buzzed again. Rachel. “No pressure, but I’m worried. Just tell me you’re alive.” Leah almost smiled despite herself. She typed, “I’m alive.” Then she stopped. That felt too small and too guarded. She added, “I’m having a hard morning.” Her thumb hovered. She sent it before she could take it back.
Rachel responded within seconds. “I know. I love you. Want me to come after work?”
Leah stared at the message until her eyes blurred. She did not answer yet. The offer felt kind, and kindness felt dangerous because it asked her to stop pretending. She put the phone face down and opened her email. The urgent messages were still waiting. The day was not going to pause because her heart had started telling the truth.
By late morning, the heat had sharpened. Tempe had become bright in the hard way desert cities do, where every surface seemed to give back the sun. Jesus walked through a neighborhood south of campus where older houses sat beside newer apartments, where bougainvillea spilled over walls and trash bins stood at the curb like tired sentries. A dog barked behind a gate. Somewhere a leaf blower whined with relentless force. He passed a small house where a man stood in the driveway beside a broken dresser, trying to tie it down in the bed of a borrowed truck.
The man’s name was Victor. He was moving out of the home where his mother had lived for twenty-eight years. She had died six weeks earlier after a slow illness that had emptied both her body and his patience. He had been a faithful son in the visible ways. He drove her to appointments. He picked up prescriptions. He paid bills when her Social Security ran thin. He slept on the couch during the last month so she would not be alone at night. Yet he could not stop remembering the times he had snapped at her when she asked the same question again, the times he had sat in the driveway before going inside because he could not bear another evening of need.
Now the house had to be cleared. The landlord wanted it ready by Monday. His sister lived in Tucson and sent texts with heart emojis and opinions. Victor did the lifting. Victor made the calls. Victor found old receipts, old photos, old church bulletins, old notes written in his mother’s careful hand. Every drawer accused him. Every room seemed to hold both love and failure.
The dresser shifted as he pulled the rope tight. One drawer slid out and hit the driveway, spilling a handful of papers. Victor swore and kicked the drawer harder than he meant to. The wood cracked. He stood there breathing heavily, ashamed and furious at a piece of furniture because grief needed somewhere to go.
Jesus stopped at the edge of the driveway. “That is not the thing you are angry at,” He said.
Victor turned sharply. “Can I help you?”
“Yes,” Jesus said.
The answer disarmed him because it was not the answer he expected. “What?”
“You can let Me lift the other side.”
Victor stared at Him. His first instinct was to refuse. Refusal had become his posture. He had refused help, refused comfort, refused calls, refused to admit that he was lonely in the house where his mother’s smell still clung to the curtains. But the dresser was heavy, and his back hurt, and the stranger’s face carried no insult. Victor nodded once.
Together they lifted the dresser into the truck. Jesus moved with quiet strength. When it was settled, Victor leaned against the tailgate and wiped sweat from his forehead. “Thanks,” he said. “I’ve got the rest.”
Jesus looked toward the open front door. Inside, boxes sat in uneven stacks. A framed picture of Victor’s mother leaned against the wall near the entry. She was smiling in the picture, wearing a blue blouse and holding a paper plate at what looked like a church potluck. Victor had turned the frame toward the wall earlier because he could not work with her face watching him.
“You have been carrying her last days as if they were the whole measure of your love,” Jesus said.
Victor’s throat tightened at once. He looked away, angry at the suddenness of it. “You don’t know anything about it.”
Jesus did not move. “You are right that I was not absent from it.”
The sentence entered the driveway and changed the air. Victor looked at Him again, but the argument he wanted would not form. There was something in the man’s eyes that made lying feel useless.
“She kept asking for my dad,” Victor said, surprising himself. “He’s been dead twelve years. She would ask like he was at work and late coming home. The first few times, I explained it. Then I got tired. One night I said, ‘Mom, he’s dead. He’s been dead.’ She looked at me like I had killed him all over again.”
His face twisted. He looked down at the cracked drawer. “That’s what I remember. Not the appointments. Not all the things I did right. I remember her face when I said that.”
Jesus stepped closer. “Cruelty remembered with grief can become repentance. Cruelty hidden under excuse becomes a wall.”
Victor breathed through his nose and shook his head. “I said I was sorry. She didn’t understand by then.”
“She was more than what her illness let her answer.”
Victor covered his eyes with one hand. He did not want to cry in the driveway in the middle of the day, with neighbors pretending not to watch through blinds. But grief had waited long enough. It came quietly at first, then with a force that bent him forward. Jesus stood near him, not touching him yet, letting the sorrow come without shame. When Victor lowered his hand, his face looked younger and ruined.
“I don’t know what to do with all her stuff,” he said.
“Keep what helps you remember love,” Jesus said. “Release what only helps you punish yourself.”
Victor looked toward the house. For weeks, he had been sorting objects as if he were sorting evidence. Now, for the first time, he wondered whether everything in that house had been waiting for mercy.
At noon, Leah walked to a small café near campus because she could not face eating at her desk. She ordered iced tea and a sandwich she did not want, then sat outside under a shade structure that only partly worked. Students filled nearby tables. Some talked about finals. Some talked about rent. One young woman was crying quietly while her friend tried to comfort her with the helpless intensity of someone young enough to believe the right sentence could fix everything.
Leah took out her phone and reread Rachel’s message. “Want me to come after work?” The answer should have been easy. Yes. Come. Sit with me. Please do not make me explain everything. But the old protective part of her resisted. If Rachel came, the apartment would no longer be a private cave. Someone would see the dishes in the sink, the stack of unopened mail, the side of the bed where no one slept. Someone would see that Leah had not become strong in the clean way people praised after loss. She had become functional and brittle.
She opened a blank reply and typed, “I don’t want to talk about Daniel.” She deleted it. She typed, “Maybe another day.” She deleted that too. Finally she set the phone down and looked across the street. Heat shimmered above the asphalt. A bus hissed at the curb. A man in a black shirt helped an older woman step down from it, then waited until she had both feet steady before he moved on. Leah watched him for no reason she could name.
It was Jesus, though she did not know that yet.
He crossed near the light and came down the sidewalk with no hurry in Him. Leah looked away before He could notice her looking. She was not in the mood for strangers. She took a bite of her sandwich and tasted nothing. Her phone buzzed. This time it was an email from Mateo.
“I went to financial aid. They said I need one more form. I’m trying. Thank you.”
Leah read it twice. Something in those two words, “I’m trying,” pierced her. She had not given herself credit for trying in a long time. She had measured herself only by what stayed broken. The marriage stayed broken. Her faith stayed strained. Her apartment stayed too quiet. Prayer stayed difficult. She had called that failure. Maybe some part of it was just a wounded person still trying.
Jesus stopped beside the empty chair at her table. “May I sit?” He asked.
Leah looked up, startled. He did not look like a threat. That was the first thing she noticed. He also did not look like a man asking because he needed the chair. He looked like someone giving her a chance to say no.
“There are other tables,” she said, then immediately regretted the coldness of it.
“Yes,” He said.
She waited for Him to leave. He did not. He simply stood there with a patience that made her feel both annoyed and ashamed.
Leah sighed. “Fine.”
Jesus sat across from her. For a moment neither of them spoke. The city filled the silence with buses, footsteps, distant construction, and the low roar of traffic. Leah looked at Him carefully now. His clothes were plain. His face held weariness and peace together in a way she did not understand. His eyes were the hardest to look at. Not because they were harsh. Because they seemed to see without taking.
“Do I know you?” she asked.
“Yes,” He said.
She frowned. “From where?”
He looked at her with a tenderness that unsettled her. “From the places you stopped speaking.”
Leah’s hand tightened around the cup. The café sounds seemed to lower around her. She almost stood up. Instead she laughed once, thinly. “That is a strange thing to say to someone.”
“It is a true thing,” Jesus said.
She looked away. A student passed with a skateboard under one arm. Across the street, someone honked. The world had the nerve to keep going while this stranger opened a locked door inside her with one sentence.
“I don’t talk to strangers about my life,” she said.
“No,” Jesus answered. “You hardly talk to the people who love you about it.”
That angered her because it was true. “You don’t know anything about who loves me.”
“I know your sister has been waiting with more patience than you have allowed yourself to receive.”
Leah stood so abruptly the chair scraped the concrete. A few people looked over. Her face burned. “I don’t know what kind of game this is, but I’m done.”
Jesus remained seated. He did not reach for her. He did not call attention to her. “Leah,” He said.
Her name in His mouth stopped her more completely than a hand on her arm could have. She had not told Him her name. Her anger did not vanish, but it lost its shape. Beneath it was fear.
“Who are you?” she whispered.
Jesus looked at her as if the question mattered. “I am the One who heard you when all you could pray was, ‘I can’t do this anymore.’”
Leah sat down slowly. Her legs felt unsteady. She remembered that prayer. It had not sounded holy. It had happened on the bathroom floor nine months after Daniel left, when she had turned on the shower so the neighbor would not hear her crying. She had not said “Lord.” She had not said “Father.” She had said, “I can’t do this anymore,” and then nothing. She had thought the nothing meant no one had answered.
Her eyes filled, but she held herself rigid. “That was not a prayer.”
“It reached Heaven,” Jesus said.
She covered her mouth with one hand. For a moment she could not speak. She wanted to deny everything. She wanted to run. She wanted to ask Him why He had waited, why the apartment was still empty, why Daniel had not changed, why her faith felt like a room full of covered furniture. Instead she asked the question that had been living under all the others.
“Why didn’t You fix it?”
Jesus did not flinch from the pain in her voice. He looked at her with grief and authority, with mercy and truth, with a love that did not treat her wound like a small thing. “You have called many things unfixed because they did not return to what they were.”
Leah shook her head. “That’s not an answer.”
“No,” He said. “It is a door.”
She let out a bitter breath. “I don’t want a door. I wanted my life back.”
Jesus’ eyes stayed on her. “Some of what you call your life was fear wearing the name of peace.”
The words landed hard. She wanted to reject them because Daniel had left and that made him the one who broke things. But beneath that simple story was another one she rarely touched. Their marriage had been full of avoidance long before he walked out. They had smiled in public and punished each other in private with silence. They had used busyness to avoid repentance. They had prayed only when things became unbearable, then blamed God for not blessing what neither of them wanted to surrender.
Leah’s tears slipped despite her effort. “I loved him,” she said.
“Yes,” Jesus said. “And you also hid from the truth with him.”
She looked at Him through tears. “That feels cruel.”
“Truth feels cruel when it first touches what shame has been protecting,” He said. “But I did not come to shame you.”
Leah pressed both hands around her cup as if it could hold her together. She did not know how the day had become this. She had come for iced tea and a sandwich. Now she was sitting across from the only person who had ever spoken to the exact place she had sealed off. The strangest part was that she did not feel exposed the way she felt exposed with people who wanted details. She felt seen in a way that hurt because it did not disgust Him.
Near the café entrance, a man dropped a stack of napkins. They scattered across the ground. Leah watched them blow under chairs and against people’s feet. No one moved at first. Then Jesus stood and gathered them without hurry. The smallness of the act nearly broke her. He had just spoken words that seemed to come from eternity, and now He was picking up napkins from the pavement. He handed them to the embarrassed worker with a kindness that made the young man’s face soften.
When Jesus sat again, Leah whispered, “I don’t know what You want from me.”
“I want what is true,” He said.
“I don’t even know what that is anymore.”
“You know more than you admit.”
She looked down. Her phone lay between them, still open to Rachel’s message. Jesus glanced at it, then at her. He did not tell her what to do. That somehow made the choice heavier. Leah picked up the phone. Her hands trembled as she typed, “Yes. Come after work. I don’t know how to talk, but I don’t want to be alone tonight.” She stared at it for a long moment. Then she sent it.
The reply came almost immediately. “I’ll bring dinner. You don’t have to explain everything.”
Leah started crying for real then, quietly and with embarrassment, but Jesus did not look away as if her tears were too much. He sat with her while the city moved around them. People kept eating, walking, scrolling, laughing, rushing. Tempe did not stop because one woman finally admitted she needed someone. But Heaven noticed.
After a while, Leah wiped her face with a napkin and let out a shaky breath. “I have to go back to work.”
“Yes,” Jesus said.
She almost laughed because He did not make the moment bigger than it needed to be. “Will I see You again?”
Jesus looked at her with the kind of certainty that made the air feel steadier. “You have never been unseen.”
She did not know what to say to that. She stood, gathered her bag, and walked back toward campus. She turned once at the corner. Jesus was still seated at the table, watching the street with a sorrowful tenderness that seemed large enough to hold every person passing by.
In the early afternoon, Jesus walked toward the Tempe Public Library. The heat had pressed more people indoors, and the city had taken on that midday stillness that is not peace but survival. Cars flashed in the sun. The sky was wide and mercilessly blue. In shaded corners, people lingered longer than they needed to. At a bus stop, Tasha sat with her hands folded over her phone, rereading the message she had sent her son. He had not answered. She was trying not to call that rejection. Jesus passed her and met her eyes. She did not follow Him, but she gave a small nod that held both gratitude and fear.
Inside the library, the air smelled faintly of paper, carpet, and cooled dust. People sat at computers. A child whispered too loudly. An older man read the newspaper with a pen in his hand, circling things for reasons no one knew. Jesus moved through the space with the quiet reverence of someone who understood that libraries hold more than books. They hold people trying to become, escape, apply, learn, recover, and endure.
At a table near the back sat a teenager named Sienna with an open laptop and three textbooks arranged like a wall. She was seventeen and taking dual enrollment classes while finishing high school. Her mother cleaned houses in south Tempe. Her father was not around in any dependable way. Everyone told Sienna she was strong, which had become another way of telling her not to need anything. She had an essay due by midnight, a shift at a grocery store later that afternoon, and a younger brother who had texted twice asking where his soccer cleats were.
Sienna stared at the blinking cursor on the screen. The essay prompt asked her to write about a defining personal challenge and how it had shaped her goals. She hated prompts like that. They wanted pain made useful. They wanted struggle shaped into a clean story with a lesson at the end. She did not know how to explain that some challenges did not define you. They just tired you out. She had typed one sentence, deleted it, typed another, and then searched scholarships for first-generation students until she felt sick.
Jesus stopped near the table but did not sit. Sienna looked up with the guarded sharpness of a young person who had learned to protect her time.
“Do you need this chair?” she asked.
“No,” Jesus said. “I was looking at the wall you built.”
She frowned. “What wall?”
He nodded toward the books, the laptop, the papers, the water bottle, the backpack blocking the chair beside her. “This one.”
Sienna’s face hardened. “I’m studying.”
“Yes,” He said. “And hiding.”
She almost told Him to leave. Instead she looked back at the screen because there was something in His voice that did not sound like an accusation. That made it harder to dismiss.
“I don’t know you,” she said.
“I know you are afraid that if you stop being impressive, people will stop believing you are worth helping.”
Her eyes snapped back to Him. She looked young then. Younger than seventeen. “That’s not true.”
Jesus waited.
Sienna closed the laptop halfway, not because she was done but because she needed a barrier. “People help people who are going somewhere,” she said. “That’s how it works.”
“Is that what you believe love is?”
She looked down at the table. Her throat moved. “It’s what I’ve seen.”
Jesus pulled out the chair across from her and sat only after she gave the smallest nod. Around them, the library carried on in whispers. A printer clicked. A child laughed and was hushed. Sienna ran her thumb along the edge of a textbook until the skin reddened.
“My counselor says I need to tell my story,” she said. “For scholarships. For applications. Everybody wants the story. But they want it hopeful. They want me to say it made me determined.”
“And did it?”
“Sometimes,” she said. “Mostly it made me mad.”
Jesus’ face did not change with disappointment. “Anger can tell the truth about what should not have happened. But it cannot become the home you live in.”
Sienna stared at Him. “You sound like someone who has never had to write an essay for money.”
Jesus looked at her hands, then at her tired face. “I know what it is to have My life weighed by people who did not understand its worth.”
She did not know what to do with that. It did not sound like a comeback. It sounded like a wound. She looked toward the window where the afternoon light lay hard against the glass.
“What am I supposed to write?” she asked.
“The truth,” Jesus said. “Not the version that begs to be chosen.”
Sienna swallowed. “The truth won’t get me picked.”
“The truth may keep you from losing yourself while trying to be picked.”
She sat with that for a long time. Then she opened the laptop and began typing slowly. Not polished sentences. Not the kind of opening that would make a committee lean forward right away. She wrote, “I used to think being strong meant nobody could tell I was scared. I am starting to think that was just another kind of fear.” She stopped after typing it and looked at Jesus as if asking permission to leave the sentence alive.
He nodded once.
Leah returned to her office and tried to work, but something in the day had shifted. Not outwardly. The emails remained. The meetings continued. A parent left a voicemail that began politely and became angry within twenty seconds. Her supervisor asked about a spreadsheet. Someone had put a container of cookies in the break room, and three people stood around it discussing parking permits like that was the central burden of human existence. Everything was ordinary, which made what happened at lunch feel almost impossible.
Yet the ordinary things no longer felt quite as sealed. Leah answered Mateo’s email and told him he had done the right thing by going. She included the next step and then added, after a long hesitation, “Keep going one step at a time.” She almost deleted that last sentence because it sounded too personal. She left it. Then she opened a new email to Rachel with no subject and wrote, “I’m scared you’ll come over and see how much I’ve been pretending.” She stared at the sentence until her face warmed. Then she sent it before fear could tidy it up.
Rachel did not respond immediately this time. Leah felt the old panic. She had said too much. She had made it uncomfortable. She had become the needy person. She checked her inbox three times in five minutes. Nothing. Then her phone buzzed with a text.
“I already know you’ve been pretending. I’m coming anyway. I love you.”
Leah put the phone down and pressed her hand to her mouth. There was no miracle in the room that anyone else could see. No one stood up and sang. No light came through the ceiling. But something hard inside her gave a quiet crack.
At three, Mateo returned without an appointment. Leah saw him through the glass before the front desk messaged her. He stood near the waiting area, shifting his weight from one foot to the other. She almost pretended she was too busy. She really was too busy. But she opened the door.
“Did something happen?” she asked.
He held up a form. “They said this needs a signature from the department. I don’t know where to go.”
Leah took the paper and scanned it. “I can walk you over.”
“You don’t have to.”
“I know,” she said.
As they walked across campus, the afternoon heat pressed against them with the blunt force of late Arizona spring. Mateo was quiet at first. Leah sensed he had more to say but did not want to start. They passed students stretched out in patches of shade, a campus tour group moving behind a guide, and a maintenance worker spraying dust from a walkway.
“My mom called,” Mateo said finally. “She could tell something was wrong.”
“What did you tell her?”
“Not everything.” He looked embarrassed. “But more than nothing.”
“That can be a start.”
He nodded. “She cried. Then she said she was proud of me for telling her. That made me feel worse for some reason.”
“Being loved when you expect disappointment can feel painful at first,” Leah said.
Mateo glanced at her. “Yeah. That’s it.”
She did not know where the sentence had come from. Maybe from lunch. Maybe from the stranger. Maybe from her own life finally telling the truth in words she could use for someone else.
Near the edge of a shaded walkway, Leah saw Jesus again. He stood beside a drinking fountain, watching a little boy struggle to fill a water bottle while his father checked his phone. Jesus leaned down and turned the bottle slightly so the water flowed cleanly inside instead of splashing over the boy’s hand. The boy grinned. The father looked up, startled, and thanked Him. Jesus smiled, then turned His eyes toward Leah.
She stopped walking.
Mateo took two more steps before noticing. “You okay?”
Leah looked at Jesus, then back at Mateo. “Yes,” she said, though she was not sure that was the right word. “I think so.”
Jesus did not come over. He only watched with that same stillness, as if He had no need to prove that He was present. Leah wanted to ask Him what was happening. She wanted to ask whether she was imagining Him, whether grief had opened something strange in her mind, whether God had really entered a normal day in Tempe and sat across from her with dust on His sandals and mercy in His eyes. But Mateo was waiting, and the form needed signing, and perhaps obedience sometimes looked like continuing the walk in front of you.
The department office was in a building Leah always found too bright. A woman at the desk told them the person who could sign the form was in a meeting. Mateo’s face fell. Leah felt irritation rise, but she kept her voice calm. She asked if they could wait. The woman shrugged, not unkindly but with the weary power of someone who had said no to many people that day. Leah and Mateo sat on a bench in the hall.
Ten minutes passed. Then twenty. Mateo’s knee bounced. Leah checked the time and thought of the emails multiplying back at her desk. She also thought of all the times she had been physically present with people while emotionally fleeing the room. She put her phone away.
“You said your mom believes in God,” she said.
Mateo looked surprised. “Yeah.”
“Does that help her?”
He thought about it. “I think it keeps her from falling apart. But sometimes I don’t get it. She prays about everything. Rent. Groceries. My brother’s asthma. My grades. The car. Everything. And things are still hard.”
Leah looked down the hall. “Maybe prayer is not always proof that things are easy. Maybe sometimes it is how people keep breathing while things are hard.”
Mateo leaned back against the wall. “Do you pray?”
The honest answer sat between them. Leah could not dress it up. “Not like I used to.”
“Why not?”
She almost said, “That is personal,” but the whole day had become personal in ways she could not control. “Because I got tired of not knowing what to do with silence.”
Mateo nodded slowly. “My mom says silence doesn’t mean empty.”
Leah looked at him. “That sounds like something a mother would say when she’s trying not to be scared.”
He smiled faintly. “Probably.”
The door opened, and the person they needed stepped out with a tablet in hand. Leah stood quickly and explained the situation. The form was signed in less than a minute. Mateo looked at the signature as if it were a lifeline.
When they stepped back outside, Jesus was gone from the drinking fountain. Leah scanned the walkway, embarrassed by how badly she wanted to see Him again. Mateo noticed.
“Are you looking for somebody?”
Leah hesitated. “I think somebody found me today.”
Mateo did not ask what she meant. Maybe he had enough of his own mysteries. They walked back in the heat, quieter than before.
By late afternoon, the city had begun to loosen its grip on the workday. Cars thickened on the roads. Students drifted toward apartments, jobs, bars, libraries, and buses. The light softened slightly, though the heat stayed. Jesus walked near Tempe Town Lake again, where the water reflected the sky in broken pieces. Earl was still there, but he was sitting upright now with his blanket folded beside him. A paper cup of coffee sat near his foot. He had not bought it. Someone had left it, and for once he had accepted the gift without turning it into an insult.
Jesus sat beside him again.
Earl did not look surprised. “You keep showing up.”
“Yes,” Jesus said.
“That your thing?”
Jesus looked at the water. “Among other things.”
Earl huffed, almost amused. For a while they watched a paddle boat move slowly across the lake. The people in it were laughing, though not loudly. Earl rubbed his hands together and said, “Her name is Naomi.”
Jesus did not ask whose. He knew.
“My daughter,” Earl said. “She used to like birds. Not in a normal kid way. She knew names. She’d correct me. I’d say duck, and she’d say, ‘No, Dad, that’s not just a duck.’ Then she’d tell me the whole thing.” His mouth trembled. “I haven’t said her name out loud in a while.”
“Heaven heard it when you could not say it,” Jesus said.
Earl looked at Him with wet eyes and a guarded frown. “You really talk like that.”
“I speak what is true.”
“Truth doesn’t always help.”
“No,” Jesus said. “Not when it is used without love.”
Earl absorbed that. He had known truth used like a weapon. He had used it that way himself. He had told Naomi’s mother ugly truths when gentleness would have cost him pride. He had told himself ugly truths until they became a cage. He looked at the water and felt the old urge to disappear inside himself.
Jesus said, “Do you want to write her?”
Earl laughed sharply. “With what address? What phone? What right?”
“With repentance,” Jesus said.
Earl’s face tightened. “That doesn’t fix eighteen years.”
“No. But it refuses to add another silent day.”
The words entered him slowly. He picked up the coffee and took a sip. It had gone lukewarm. “What would I even say?”
Jesus did not answer at once. He let Earl feel the question. Then He said, “Begin with her name. Do not begin with your excuses.”
Earl closed his eyes. Naomi. He said it inside himself first. Then he whispered it. The name came out broken, but it came out.
On campus, Leah finished the workday later than planned. She had missed two deadlines and completed three things that mattered more. Her supervisor would not see it that way. The spreadsheet was still unfinished. The voicemail from the angry parent still needed a response. But Mateo had the signature. Rachel was coming over. Leah had told the truth twice in one day, maybe three times if she counted the sentence she had spoken to Jesus at the café, the one about wanting her life back.
She packed her bag slowly. Before shutting down her computer, she opened a browser and searched for nothing in particular. Her fingers hovered, then typed “Jesus in Tempe.” The words looked strange on the screen, too direct and too close to the day she had just lived. Search results appeared, but she did not click them. She only sat there, thinking about how faith sometimes returned not as certainty but as a disturbance. A holy interruption. A presence at the table you did not invite and somehow had been starving for.
She closed the browser. In her mind, the phrase Jesus in Tempe, Arizona did not feel like an idea anymore. It felt like a question walking through her city, touching all the places where people had learned to keep moving so no one would know they were afraid.
When she stepped outside, evening had begun to gather along the edges of the buildings. Tempe looked different in that light. Softer, though not less real. The same sidewalks held the same tired people. The same streets carried the same impatient cars. Yet Leah saw more than she had seen that morning. She saw a young man sitting alone on a low wall, staring at his phone like it held a verdict. She saw a woman in a business suit take off her heels before crossing the parking lot. She saw a father lift a sleeping child from a car seat and kiss the top of his head with the absent tenderness of someone doing it by habit and love at the same time.
At the parking structure, Leah paused before getting into her car. She could still choose to cancel on Rachel. She could say she was tired. It would be true. She could say something came up. That would be partly true too. Fear had come up. Shame had come up. The old urge to protect the illusion had come up. Instead she texted, “The apartment is messy.” Then she added, “I’m not cleaning it before you come.”
Rachel replied, “Good. I’m bringing tacos.”
Leah laughed. It surprised her. The sound was small, but it was real.
Across town, Victor stood in his mother’s living room holding the framed picture he had turned to the wall. Jesus had left the driveway an hour earlier, but His words had stayed. Keep what helps you remember love. Release what only helps you punish yourself. Victor looked around the room at the boxes and furniture and half-filled trash bags. He had been trying to erase the house fast because staying hurt too much. Now he moved more slowly.
He opened a box marked “kitchen” and found a small notebook full of recipes. His mother’s handwriting leaned slightly to the right. On one page, beside a recipe for green chile stew, she had written, “Victor likes extra potatoes.” He sat down on the floor with the notebook in his lap. For weeks, he had remembered only the worst moments of her decline. He had forgotten that love had years in it. Years of extra potatoes. Years of birthday calls. Years of her saving coupons she thought he might use. Years of her saying, “Drive safe,” even when he was only going five minutes away.
His sister called while he was sitting there. He almost ignored it. Then he answered.
“I can’t talk long,” she said quickly. “I just wanted to see how it’s going.”
Victor looked at the room. The old irritation rose. She always called when she could not talk long. She always wanted updates without carrying boxes. He opened his mouth to say something sharp. Then he saw the cracked drawer in the driveway through the front window and felt again the sorrow of words that cannot be unsaid.
“It’s hard,” he said. “I’m angry. Not just at you. At everything.”
His sister was quiet. “I know,” she said, and her voice broke. “I’m sorry I’m not there.”
Victor stared at the recipe notebook. “I need help choosing what to keep.”
“I can come Saturday,” she said. “I should have offered sooner.”
“Yes,” he said. Then, after a breath, “Come Saturday.”
It was not forgiveness fully grown. It was not a repaired family. It was a door opened from the inside.
At the library, Sienna was still writing. Her shift would begin in forty minutes, and she would be late if she did not leave soon. The essay on her screen was uneven and too honest. She had written about being tired of becoming an example before she had been allowed to be a person. She had written about loving her mother and resenting how much responsibility had fallen on her. She had written about wanting to succeed without turning her pain into a performance. She did not know if it was good. She knew it was true.
Jesus stood near the end of the aisle. She looked up and saw Him there.
“I wrote it wrong,” she said.
“Did you write it falsely?”
She looked back at the screen. “No.”
“Then it is not wrong in the way that matters most.”
She saved the document, closed the laptop, and packed her bag. Before leaving, she texted her brother, “Cleats are in the hall closet. I’m proud of you. Don’t forget water.” She almost added, “I’m tired of being your second mom,” but she did not. That sentence was true too, but not for him. Not today.
When she walked outside, the evening light made the concrete glow. She saw students moving across the area near the library, each carrying some private version of fear, ambition, hunger, or hope. For the first time in a long time, she did not feel like the only one pretending to be less afraid than she was.
Leah drove home slowly. She avoided the freeway and took surface streets because she needed time before Rachel arrived. She passed familiar corners that felt slightly changed because she was slightly changed. The city had not become holy in a sentimental way. It had always been full of holy ache. She had simply been too numb to notice. Tempe was not only Mill Avenue lights, campus energy, apartment balconies, traffic, heat, and noise. It was also bedrooms where people whispered prayers they did not think counted. It was bus stops where tired mothers decided to apologize. It was library tables where young women stopped selling a polished version of their pain. It was offices where a student asked if God was disappointed and a woman answered from the ruins of her own faith.
At a red light, Leah saw Jesus walking along the sidewalk. She knew it was Him before she saw His face. He moved past a row of small businesses, past a man locking a door, past a woman bending to pick up a dropped receipt. Leah wanted to pull over. The light changed. A car behind her honked. She drove forward, heart pounding.
She did not understand why He appeared and disappeared through the day. She did not understand why He had spoken to her but not fixed everything. Daniel was still gone. Her apartment was still messy. Her prayers were still difficult. Tomorrow would still bring emails, holds, students in trouble, bills, and the ache of waking alone. Yet something had been placed inside the ache now. Not an answer that solved it. A presence that would not let the ache call itself abandoned.
When she reached her apartment, she sat in the car with the engine off. The complex was not beautiful, but evening softened it. A child rode a scooter along the walkway. Someone was cooking onions nearby. A dog barked from behind a patio gate. Leah carried her bag upstairs and opened the door to the life she had been hiding.
The apartment smelled closed. The dishes were there. The mail was there. The half-brown plant was there. The silence was there too, but it did not feel as total as it had that morning. Leah set her bag down and walked to the balcony. From there she could see a slice of sky over the roofs and power lines. The light was fading toward gold.
She thought about praying. The thought frightened her. Prayer had become a place where she expected disappointment. She leaned against the railing and tried to find words that did not feel fake. Nothing came at first. Then, quietly, with no ceremony, she said, “I don’t know how to come back.”
The sentence was complete, but it opened something unfinished.
Down near the lake, Earl had found a dull pencil in his bag and a folded receipt with blank space on the back. He had written “Naomi” at the top. After that, he sat for a long time. Jesus was not beside him now, but Earl could still feel the instruction. Do not begin with your excuses. He pressed the pencil to the paper and wrote, “I am sorry I disappeared from your life.” He stopped there. His hand shook. It was not enough. It was not everything. It was not a bridge all the way across eighteen years. But it was the first honest plank.
Tasha sat on a bench at a transit stop with a new message on her phone. Her son had replied with only four words. “I need some time.” She had cried when she read them because they were not forgiveness, but they were not silence. She typed, “Take the time you need. I love you.” Then she put the phone away and watched the next train approach.
Victor taped the recipe page with the green chile stew to the inside lid of a box marked “keep.” Sienna clocked in three minutes late and did not apologize five times the way she normally would. Mateo sat at a table outside the Memorial Union with the signed form in his backpack and called his mother. Leah waited in her apartment with the door unlocked for Rachel, trying not to clean away the evidence of her need.
The city did not know what to call this. It would not make the news. It would not trend. No one would write a headline about a woman sending an honest text, or a tired mother missing a train because mercy had finally moved faster than pride, or a grieving son choosing one recipe instead of a whole box of punishment. Yet these were the kinds of moments Heaven had always noticed. They were not small because they were quiet. They were quiet because grace often begins where people have no strength left to perform.
Rachel knocked at 6:43, even though the door was unlocked. Leah opened it and saw her sister holding a paper bag of food and two drinks. Rachel’s eyes moved once over Leah’s face and then past her into the apartment. Leah waited for the flicker of judgment. It did not come. Rachel stepped inside and set the food on the counter.
“I brought extra salsa,” Rachel said. Her voice was gentle but deliberately normal, which nearly made Leah cry again.
“I didn’t clean,” Leah said.
“I can see that,” Rachel answered, and then she smiled with such warmth that Leah let out a weak laugh.
They ate at the small kitchen table. At first they talked about ordinary things. Rachel’s youngest had lost a shoe at school. Her husband had tried to fix the garbage disposal and made it worse. Their mother had called twice about a doctor’s appointment she had already written down. Leah listened, grateful for the safe noise of family life. Then the quiet came. Rachel did not rush to fill it.
Leah looked at the empty food containers, then at her sister. “I think I saw Jesus today,” she said.
Rachel did not laugh. She did not widen her eyes. She did not turn it into a moment too quickly. She only waited.
Leah shook her head. “That sounds insane.”
“Tell me anyway,” Rachel said.
So Leah did. Not all of it. Not perfectly. She told her about the café, about the stranger who knew her name, about the sentence from the bathroom floor that He called a prayer. She told her about Mateo and the question about God being disappointed. She told her about searching those words on her computer and being scared by how close they felt. She did not know how to explain the holiness of Him without sounding dramatic. She did not know how to describe the way He corrected her without crushing her. She tried anyway.
Rachel listened with tears in her eyes. “I prayed for you this morning,” she said.
Leah looked up. “What?”
“In the kitchen. Before the kids got loud. I prayed God would get through to you somehow because I didn’t know how.”
Leah leaned back in her chair. For a moment she felt the whole day differently. Jesus near the water in quiet prayer. Rachel in her kitchen. Earl by the lake. Tasha at the crosswalk. Victor in the driveway. Sienna in the library. Mateo in the office. All these separate lives, and yet the mercy moving through them had not felt scattered. It had felt deliberate. Hidden, but deliberate.
“I thought silence meant He wasn’t answering,” Leah said.
Rachel reached across the table. “Maybe sometimes He was answering through people you wouldn’t let in.”
Leah looked at her sister’s hand. She wanted to take it and did not want to take it. The wanting and the resistance sat together. Then she reached out. Rachel’s fingers closed around hers.
For a while they sat that way. The apartment was still messy. The mail was still unopened. Leah’s life was still not fixed. But she was not alone in it tonight. That was not everything. It was enough to begin.
Later, after Rachel started washing dishes without asking permission, Leah walked into the bedroom and opened the closet. Daniel’s side had been mostly empty for two years, but a shoebox remained on the top shelf. She had avoided it because she knew what was inside. Old cards. A few photos. A folded program from their wedding. She took it down and sat on the bed.
The first photo was from their early days in Tempe, taken near the lake when they were both sunburned and smiling with the foolish confidence of people who did not yet know how hard love could become. Leah held the picture and felt grief rise, but it was not the same grief as before. It had less poison in it. She did not suddenly want Daniel back. She did not excuse what had happened. She did not pretend she had been innocent in every way. She simply looked at the faces of two people who had not known how to tell the truth soon enough.
Rachel appeared in the doorway with a dish towel over one shoulder. “You okay?”
“No,” Leah said. Then she added, “But I think that’s finally an honest no.”
Rachel came and sat beside her. They looked through the box together. Some memories made them laugh. Some made Leah quiet. When they found the wedding program, Leah expected shame to take over. Instead she felt sorrow, deep and clean, like a wound being washed.
Near the bottom of the box was a note Daniel had written during their first year of marriage. It was nothing polished. Just a few lines on torn paper. “I know I shut down when I’m scared. I’m trying. Thank you for not giving up on me.” Leah read it twice. Then she closed her eyes. Somewhere along the way, both of them had given up in ways they did not name. The note did not erase anything. It did not make the past simple. It only reminded her that people are rarely only the worst thing they did or the last thing they failed to become.
She set the note aside. “I think I need to forgive him,” she said. “Not tonight all at once. But I need to stop keeping him in a prison inside me.”
Rachel leaned her shoulder gently against Leah’s. “That sounds like a start.”
Leah nodded. She thought of the phrase that had come to her earlier, the one that felt like it belonged to more than her own day. the quiet places where grace begins did not look impressive from the outside. They looked like a text sent with shaking hands, a form signed after waiting in a hallway, a recipe kept instead of a drawer kicked apart, a sister walking into a messy apartment and staying.
Outside, night settled over Tempe. The heat slowly lifted from the sidewalks. Lights came on across the city. Students crossed streets in groups. A man by the lake folded a receipt and placed it carefully in his pocket. A mother stepped onto a train with sore feet and a softer face. A young woman at a grocery store checked the time and thought about the honest essay waiting on her laptop. A grieving son locked his mother’s house and did not turn the photograph back toward the wall.
And Jesus kept walking through the city, seen by some, missed by many, present to all. He moved through Tempe as one who had prayed for it before it woke and would pray for it after it slept. He did not rush the wounded into performance. He did not flatter the proud to keep them comfortable. He did not treat silence as absence or small obedience as small. He saw the hidden turns before anyone else could name them. He saw the exact places where people were beginning to come home.
Leah did not sleep well that night, but for the first time in a long while, she did not feel alone inside the sleeplessness. Rachel stayed later than she planned. She washed the dishes without making a speech about them. She took the trash out because it smelled faintly sour and because sisters who love each other sometimes do practical things before emotional things. She did not try to fix Leah. She did not say Daniel’s name too often. She only stayed, and that became its own kind of mercy.
After Rachel left, Leah stood in the doorway for a long time and watched her sister walk toward the parking lot. The night air still carried the heat of the day, but it had softened. Somewhere in the complex, someone was laughing too loudly on a balcony. A child complained about bedtime. A car door shut. Tempe kept living around her in ordinary sounds. That used to make her feel invisible. Tonight, it made her feel strangely held, as if ordinary life had not been mocking her pain but waiting for her to rejoin it.
She locked the door and leaned her forehead against it. For a moment she wanted to call Rachel back. Not because anything was wrong. Because something had been right, and the leaving made the room feel bigger. She turned around and saw the apartment as it was. Not as a moral failure. Not as proof that she had fallen apart. Just as a place where a hurting woman had been surviving. That distinction felt small, but it changed how she breathed.
She carried the shoebox from the bedroom to the kitchen table and sat beneath the overhead light. The old photographs lay in uneven stacks. The wedding program sat beside Daniel’s note. She read it again, slower this time. “I know I shut down when I’m scared. I’m trying. Thank you for not giving up on me.” The words belonged to a man who had once wanted to become better. That did not erase the man who later left. It also did not erase the woman she had become in response. Leah felt the old desire to make one person innocent and the other guilty. It would have been easier that way. It would have let her keep the pain simple.
The truth was not simple. Jesus had not given her a simple truth at the café. He had opened a door, and now the door would not close. Some of what she called her life had been fear wearing the name of peace. She hated that sentence because it had found a hidden room inside her. She had wanted peace to mean no conflict, no hard conversations, no one raising their voice, no one leaving the room, no one naming what had gone cold. She had called silence maturity. She had called distance patience. She had called her own disappearance sacrifice. Daniel had his failures. She had hers. The marriage had not broken in one day. It had weakened in all the days when truth asked to be spoken and both of them stepped around it.
She opened the notes app on her phone and stared at the blank space. Her fingers hovered. She did not know if she was writing a prayer, a confession, or a message she would never send. Finally she typed, “I am angry that he left, but I am also angry that I stayed quiet for so long and called it love.” She stopped there. Her chest tightened, but she kept going. “I do not know how to forgive him without pretending what happened did not matter. I do not know how to forgive myself without making excuses. God, I do not know how to come back.”
When she finished, she set the phone down and cried in a way that did not feel like collapse. It felt more like thawing. The tears did not fix anything. They did not answer every question. They simply told the truth her body had been holding. She had spent so long trying to be decent that she had forgotten how to be honest. Maybe decent had been too small a goal. Maybe God had not called her to perform stability for people who barely knew her. Maybe He had been waiting for her to bring Him the real wound instead of the version she thought sounded acceptable.
Across the city, Jesus was walking under the darkened sky. Tempe’s lights reflected in the lake and broke into trembling pieces on the water. He passed under the bridge where the sound of tires moved overhead like distant weather. Earl was asleep with the folded receipt tucked inside his shirt pocket. The first words to Naomi rested there, fragile and incomplete. Jesus stopped near him and looked down with compassion. Earl stirred but did not wake. In his sleep, his hand moved once toward the pocket, as if even there he was afraid to lose the beginning.
Jesus continued along the water. He moved past couples walking close together, past students taking pictures, past a man sitting alone with earbuds in and a face full of pressure. He saw the city in layers. He saw the young man laughing with friends while hiding the email from his father that said he would not pay another semester. He saw the woman in a parked car eating dinner from a paper bag before her second job. He saw the professor who had built a career around intelligence and had no idea how to ask his adult daughter why she no longer called. He saw the bartender who made everyone feel welcome and went home to a room where no one waited. None of it was noise to Him. None of it blurred together. Every soul remained distinct before Him.
Near the lake, Tasha stepped off a train later than usual and began the walk toward the bus connection that would take her closer to home. She was moving slowly because her feet hurt badly now. Missing the earlier train had cost her time, but not in the way she had feared. She had sat at the station after sending the message to her son and felt something she had not felt in months. She felt grief without rage standing guard in front of it. That was new, and it made her tired.
Her son’s answer sat in her mind. I need some time. She had wanted more. Of course she had. She wanted him to say he missed her too. She wanted him to say he knew she had done her best. She wanted him to give her a way to feel forgiven by bedtime. Instead he had asked for time, and she had said she would give it. That was easy to type and hard to live.
She saw Jesus near the path before He spoke. She stopped because part of her had been looking for Him since the afternoon. “He answered,” she said.
“I know,” Jesus said.
Tasha shook her head, not quite smiling. “Of course You do.”
They walked together at a slow pace. She did not ask where He was going. Something about Him made direction feel less urgent. The city lights moved across the water. A group of students passed them, joking loudly, then grew quieter as they drew near Him, though none of them seemed to understand why.
“He said he needs time,” Tasha said. “I keep wanting to send another message. Explain more. Make sure he knows I wasn’t trying to be a bad mother.”
Jesus looked ahead. “You want him to understand your pain before you have fully made room for his.”
Tasha flinched. She did not like that. It sounded too much like the argument she had been avoiding. “I worked all the time for him.”
“Yes,” Jesus said.
“I missed things because I had to keep us alive.”
“Yes.”
“He doesn’t understand what it costs.”
Jesus stopped and turned toward her. “Then tell him when the time is right. But do not use your sacrifice to silence his wound.”
The words were not loud, but they carried more weight than any raised voice could have. Tasha looked across the water. Her son’s face at fifteen came back to her. He was sitting at the kitchen table with a school award beside him, waiting for her to come home. She had missed the ceremony because a coworker called out and she could not risk the hours. When she got home, she found him awake, pretending not to care. She had told him she was sorry. Then she had explained the schedule, the bills, the unfairness of everything. She had explained because she was exhausted. She had explained because guilt had frightened her. She had explained until his disappointment had no room to breathe.
“I thought if he knew why, it would hurt him less,” she said.
Jesus’ face was full of mercy. “Sometimes explanations arrive too early because repentance is afraid to stand alone.”
Tasha wiped her eyes with the back of her hand. “You make everything sound simple.”
“No,” Jesus said. “I make it true.”
She gave a small, broken laugh. “That’s worse.”
“It is the beginning of better.”
They continued walking. Tasha’s phone buzzed once. She froze, then pulled it out. It was not her son. It was her supervisor asking if she could cover another shift the next night. Her thumb moved toward a familiar answer before she stopped herself. She needed the money. She also needed to sleep. She had become so used to being needed that rest felt like irresponsibility.
Jesus watched her.
“I can’t just say no to everything,” she said.
“No,” He answered. “But you must stop saying yes as if your worth depends on being exhausted.”
She looked at the phone, then typed, “I can’t cover tomorrow. I’m sorry.” She almost added three more explanations. She deleted them. Then she sent it. Her heart pounded as if she had done something dangerous.
Jesus smiled gently. “That is also a kind of truth.”
At the same hour, Victor was sitting alone in his mother’s house with every light on. He had meant to go home, but the house held him. He told himself it was because there was more work to do. There was always more work to do. But the real reason was that leaving the house felt like admitting his mother was not in it anymore. He had packed the recipe notebook and three framed pictures. He had thrown away expired coupons, old pill bottles, broken plastic containers, and a drawer full of keys that fit locks no one remembered.
His sister, Marina, had called again. She said she would come Saturday. She asked if he needed anything before then. He almost said no. Then he heard his mother’s voice in memory, not from her last sick days but from years earlier, telling him, “Mijo, people cannot help you if you keep acting like needing help is a crime.” He had not thought of that sentence in years. It returned now with painful clarity.
He told Marina, “Can you bring boxes? Real ones. Not grocery bags.”
She said yes. Then she said, “I miss her too, Vic.”
He had closed his eyes when she said it. He had been so busy being the one who carried the work that he had nearly denied her the right to carry grief. That realization did not make him feel noble. It made him feel ashamed. He sat now on the living room floor, holding the photograph from the church potluck. His mother’s smile looked almost mischievous. He remembered that day. She had brought rice, beans, and a cake that leaned to one side because the passenger seat of her car was not flat. Everyone loved the cake anyway.
Jesus stood in the doorway. Victor did not hear Him knock because He did not knock. The door was open behind the screen, letting in the warm night air. Victor looked up and did not seem surprised.
“I thought you left,” he said.
“I did,” Jesus answered. “And I came.”
Victor nodded like that made sense, though it did not. He looked back at the picture. “I found her recipes.”
Jesus stepped inside. “You loved being loved by her in ways you did not notice until now.”
Victor swallowed. “That feels selfish.”
“It is human to recognize gifts more clearly after loss. It becomes selfish only if gratitude turns inward and refuses to become love for others.”
Victor thought of Marina. He thought of the sharp answers he had given her. He thought of how he had turned service into accusation because he needed someone to blame for the loneliness of caregiving. “I was mad she wasn’t here,” he said. “My sister. I kept thinking she got to have a life while I got stuck.”
“You were not wrong to be tired,” Jesus said. “You were wrong to let tiredness become a throne.”
Victor looked up sharply. “A throne?”
“You let your sacrifice rule the room,” Jesus said. “Then everyone who did not bow to it became your enemy.”
The words cut him. He wanted to argue. He could have listed every appointment, every prescription, every night he slept badly on that couch. Jesus knew all of it. That was what made the correction different. It did not come from ignorance. It came from perfect sight. Victor put the photograph down and rubbed both hands over his face.
“I don’t know how to be sorry without feeling like nobody sees what I did,” he said.
Jesus knelt across from him on the carpet. The Lord of heaven knelt in a rental house in Tempe beside boxes and dust and old curtains, and the room seemed to grow still around Him. “I saw every cup of water,” Jesus said. “I saw every mile driven. I saw every night you listened for her breathing. You do not need to use bitterness to prove the work was real.”
Victor bent forward and wept. This time the tears did not come from the cracked drawer or the last ugly memory. They came from being seen without having to present evidence. He cried for his mother. He cried for the anger that had kept him company after she could not. He cried for Marina, who had grieved from a distance and probably felt useless every time he made her feel that way. Jesus stayed near him. No sermon filled the room. No quick repair covered the wound. Only presence, truth, and the beginning of release.
At the grocery store, Sienna moved through her shift with a strange kind of quiet inside her. She scanned items, answered questions, helped an older man find the right line, and tried not to think about the essay waiting on her laptop. Her manager asked why she was late. She said, “I lost track of time at the library.” He gave her a look and moved on. Usually she would have apologized until he felt powerful enough to forgive her. This time she simply returned to work.
The store was busy in the uneven way stores get busy after sunset. People came in for milk, snacks, diapers, energy drinks, medicine, and things they forgot until the day was almost done. Sienna watched them place pieces of their lives on the belt. A tired father buying cereal and cough syrup. A student buying ramen and a single avocado. A woman buying flowers and a sympathy card. A man buying dog food and birthday candles. It struck her that everyone had a story no checkout line could hold.
Her phone buzzed during her break. It was her mother. “Your brother found the cleats. Thank you. Are you okay?” Sienna stared at the message. Her first instinct was to type, “Yes.” That was the answer that kept things moving. That was the answer expected of useful daughters. Instead she typed, “I’m tired, Mom.” She almost deleted it. Then she sent it.
The reply took a few minutes. Sienna sat in the break room under harsh light, listening to the vending machine hum. When the phone buzzed again, she braced herself for instruction or guilt. Her mother had written, “I know. I am sorry I don’t ask that enough.”
Sienna read the message until the words blurred. She had expected to feel relief. Instead she felt sadness. Not because the message was wrong. Because it was right and late. She placed the phone face down and breathed slowly. Jesus had told her not to let anger become the home she lived in. She understood now that leaving that home did not mean pretending it had never sheltered her. Anger had kept her alive in some ways. It had told her she mattered when responsibility tried to swallow her. But she could not build her whole future inside it.
When her break ended, she returned to the register. An hour later, Jesus came through her line with a loaf of bread and a bottle of water. She knew Him at once and looked around as if someone else might notice.
“You shop?” she asked before she could stop herself.
Jesus placed the items on the belt. “I enter ordinary places.”
She smiled despite herself. “That sounds like a yes and not a yes.”
“It is enough of an answer for tonight.”
She scanned the bread. “I told my mom I’m tired.”
“I know.”
“She said she was sorry.”
Jesus nodded. “Did you believe her?”
Sienna hesitated. “I wanted to.”
“That can be the honest beginning.”
She bagged the items slowly. “I still want to leave. Go to college somewhere else. Not be needed every second.”
“Wanting room to grow is not betrayal,” Jesus said. “But do not confuse freedom with proving no one can need you anymore.”
Sienna looked down. That sentence found its mark. She had pictured leaving as a clean escape, a final statement that she would no longer be the one who remembered everything for everyone. But maybe true freedom was not becoming unreachable. Maybe it was learning to love without being consumed.
The customer behind Jesus shifted impatiently. Sienna handed Him the bag. Their fingers did not touch, but she felt steadied.
“Will my essay work?” she asked.
Jesus looked at her with gentle seriousness. “Let it tell the truth. Let the outcome serve what is true, not rule over it.”
She nodded. He walked away with bread and water, and Sienna returned to scanning groceries with tears in her eyes and a peace she did not know how to explain.
Mateo sat outside the Memorial Union until the lights came on and the campus changed from daytime pressure to nighttime restlessness. He had called his mother. He had told her enough to scare her and not enough to crush her. She cried, then prayed over the phone in Spanish and English, moving between both the way she always did when fear made one language too small. Mateo had been embarrassed at first because people were walking by. Then he bowed his head because he was too tired to pretend.
After the call, he sat with his elbows on his knees and looked at the ground. He had taken steps today. Real ones. The form was signed. The missing document was ready to upload. An advisor had agreed to review his case. Nothing was settled, but things were moving. That should have made him feel better. Instead he felt the delayed weight of how close he had come to losing everything.
Jesus sat beside him without asking. Mateo glanced over and recognized Him from near the drinking fountain. “You were with Ms. Leah,” he said.
“Yes.”
“You know her?”
“Yes.”
Mateo nodded slowly. He was too tired to question it. “She helped me.”
“She did.”
“I think she’s sad.”
Jesus looked toward the campus lights. “She has been sad for a long time.”
Mateo picked at a loose thread on his backpack strap. “I made her talk about God. I didn’t mean to.”
“You did not make her,” Jesus said. “Your need opened a place where her honesty could breathe.”
Mateo did not fully understand that, but he felt the truth of it. “Do You think God’s disappointed in me?”
Jesus turned to him. The look in His eyes made Mateo sit still. There was no softness that lied and no severity that pushed him away. “God is not confused about your weakness,” Jesus said. “He is not surprised by your fear. But He loves you too much to let you keep calling surrender the same thing as failure.”
Mateo’s eyes filled. “I’m so tired.”
“I know.”
“I don’t want to be the hope of my whole family,” he said. “That sounds terrible. I love them. I love my mom. But I feel like if I mess up, I mess it up for everybody.”
Jesus let the words settle. “You were not created to carry your family’s future as if you were their savior.”
Mateo laughed once through tears. “Tell my mom that.”
“I have,” Jesus said.
Mateo looked at Him, confused, then looked away. He thought of his mother praying in the kitchen before sunrise. He thought of her hands, cracked from work. He thought of the acceptance letter she had framed. He loved her for it and felt trapped by it. Both were true.
“What am I supposed to do?” he asked.
“Take the next faithful step,” Jesus said. “Then let tomorrow be tomorrow.”
Mateo wiped his face quickly. “That sounds too small.”
“It is how many people return from the edge,” Jesus said. “Not by seeing the whole road. By taking the step that is lit.”
Mateo sat with that. A group of students walked past, laughing loudly. One of them shouted to someone across the courtyard. The night felt young around him, but he felt old from worry. Still, the words helped. The step that is lit. He could upload the document. He could email Leah. He could sleep before work. He could tell his mother the truth in pieces instead of building a fake life for her to admire.
He pulled out his laptop and connected to the campus Wi-Fi. His hands shook as he uploaded the document. When the confirmation appeared, he stared at it for a long time. Then he forwarded it to Leah with a short note. “Uploaded. Thank you for walking with me today.”
Leah saw the email at 10:18 while Rachel was still sitting on her bed with the shoebox between them. She read the message and felt a quiet warmth. “The student from today sent the document,” she said.
Rachel smiled. “That matters.”
“It does,” Leah said. Then she surprised herself by adding, “I think I mattered today.”
Rachel looked at her carefully, not wanting to rush the moment. “You did.”
Leah closed the email and set her phone aside. For once, she let the sentence remain simple. She had mattered. Not because she solved every problem. Not because she held herself together perfectly. Not because her life looked clean from the outside. She had mattered because she had stayed present with a young man who was scared. She had mattered because she had told the truth. She had mattered because God could still move through a person who did not feel fully repaired.
That thought frightened her and comforted her at the same time.
Rachel left a little after eleven. This time, Leah did not feel the same panic when the door closed. She walked around the apartment and did three small things. She threw away the dead leaves from the plant. She opened the oldest piece of mail and paid the bill inside it. She put the wedding program back in the shoebox but kept Daniel’s note on the table. She was not sure why. Maybe because it reminded her that people could be afraid and trying at the same time. Maybe because she needed to remember that about herself too.
She picked up her phone and opened Daniel’s contact. There had been no meaningful conversation between them in months. Only occasional logistics. A forwarded document. A tax question. A message about a piece of mail that still came to the wrong address. Her thumb hovered over the call button. She was not ready to call. She knew that. Forgiveness was not the same as forcing contact before wisdom had time to speak. She opened a message instead and typed, “I found your note from our first year. I am not trying to reopen everything tonight. I just wanted to say I hope you are well.” She stared at it. It was honest, but maybe not necessary. Maybe it was too soon. Maybe it was not for him at all.
She deleted it.
Then she opened her notes and wrote, “God, I release the need to make him understand me tonight.” That felt more true. It felt less like reaching for control dressed as healing. She put the phone down and sat in the silence. This time the silence did not feel empty. It felt like someone was there without needing to fill the room with noise.
Just before midnight, Jesus returned to the place near Tempe Town Lake where the day had begun. The city had quieted, though it had not gone silent. Cars still moved across the bridge. Music came faintly from somewhere near Mill Avenue. A train sounded in the distance. The water carried the reflected lights in trembling lines. The desert air held its late-night warmth, and the sky stretched dark above the city.
Jesus stood for a while and looked over Tempe. He saw Leah sitting at her kitchen table with honesty beside her. He saw Rachel driving home, praying in short sentences at red lights. He saw Mateo asleep at last with his laptop still open and the uploaded document confirmed on the screen. He saw Tasha lying awake, resisting the urge to send one more message and choosing to give her son the time he asked for. He saw Victor sleeping on his mother’s couch under an old blanket, the recipe notebook safely packed in a box marked keep. He saw Sienna finishing her shift and walking home with an essay that did not beg to be loved. He saw Earl wake before dawn would come, touch the receipt in his pocket, and decide not to throw it away.
He saw what no one else would have counted. He saw the small obediences. He saw the unfinished repentances. He saw the prayers that had no religious shape but rose anyway. He saw the mercy beginning in places that still looked messy. He saw the city not as a crowd, not as a campus, not as a collection of streets and buildings, but as souls made by His Father and wounded in ways only holy love could fully name.
Then Jesus knelt again in quiet prayer.
He prayed for the students who felt like their future would disappear if they failed one class. He prayed for the workers who cleaned buildings they could not afford to live near. He prayed for parents who loved their children and still wounded them. He prayed for children who had grown tired of understanding their parents too early. He prayed for the divorced, the hidden, the ashamed, the bitter, the proud, the numb, the grieving, and the ones who had mistaken survival for peace. He prayed for every apartment where someone stood at a sink after midnight and wondered how life became this. He prayed for Tempe as one who knew every street and every secret.
No crowd gathered. No one applauded. The city did not know the Son of God was kneeling beside its water with its burdens before the Father. Yet Heaven knew. The Father knew. The Spirit moved where human eyes could not trace Him. Mercy was already at work in rooms where nothing looked finished.
The next morning came slowly. A pale edge of light touched the sky, and the lake began to show itself again. Earl woke with a stiffness in his back and a bad taste in his mouth. For a moment he forgot the day before. Then he felt the folded receipt inside his shirt. He pulled it out carefully. The paper had softened from being carried close to his body. Naomi’s name stood at the top. The apology sat beneath it, thin and trembling but real.
He looked toward the place where Jesus had sat. No one was there. A jogger passed. A bird moved near the water. Earl held the pencil and wrote one more sentence. “You do not owe me an answer.” He stared at that line longer than the first. It cost him more than he expected. Some part of him had wanted repentance to become a key. He wanted the letter to open a door, bring back a daughter, restore a name, give him proof that he was not too late. But the man who sat with him had said not to begin with excuses. Maybe he should not end with demands.
He folded the receipt again and placed it in his pocket. He did not know how to find Naomi yet. He did not know if he would have the courage when he did. But he had begun to tell the truth, and for the first time in years, the morning did not feel like only another punishment.
Leah woke before her alarm. She lay still and listened to the hum of the apartment. Nothing dramatic waited in the room. No vision. No voice. No sudden certainty about every next step. She almost felt disappointed. Then she remembered what Jesus had said to Mateo, though she had not heard Him say it. The step that is lit. She did not know where the thought came from, but it arrived whole, and it gave her enough courage to sit up.
She made coffee and watered the plant. She could not save the dead leaves she had removed, but the stems still had green in them. That felt almost too obvious as a metaphor, so she smiled and refused to make it into one. She opened the blinds. Morning entered without asking permission. The same city waited outside, but Leah was not the same woman who had woken there the day before.
Before work, she stood at the kitchen counter and prayed. Not beautifully. Not confidently. She did not close her eyes for long because that made her feel like she was trying too hard. She simply said, “Jesus, I do not know how to do this. Stay with me while I learn.” Then she paused. The silence that followed did not answer in words. It also did not feel empty.
At the office, Mateo had already sent one more message. “I got confirmation that my case is under review. I’m going to class today.” Leah read it and replied, “Good. Keep showing up.” She almost added more. She did not. Sometimes a small sentence could carry enough.
Her supervisor came by at nine-thirty and asked about the unfinished spreadsheet. Leah felt the old panic rise. She wanted to over-explain. She wanted to apologize with enough detail to avoid disappointment. Instead she said, “I fell behind yesterday because I helped a student with an urgent situation. I’ll finish it by noon.” Her supervisor looked mildly annoyed, then nodded and moved on. That was all. No collapse. No disaster. No proof that honesty would destroy her. Leah sat back in her chair and breathed.
Around lunch, Rachel texted a picture of Leah’s niece holding two mismatched shoes with the caption, “We still have no idea how this happened.” Leah laughed out loud in her office. A coworker looked over. Leah did not hide the smile.
That afternoon, she walked to the same café. She did not know whether she expected to see Jesus. She told herself she was only getting iced tea. The chair across from her remained empty. She felt a pang of sadness, then a steadier realization. He had not become absent because He was not visible. The day before had not been a magic trick. It had been revelation. The truth revealed was not that Jesus might appear at a table when she was desperate enough. The truth was that He had been near in the silence all along, nearer than her fear had allowed her to believe.
She took out her phone and called Rachel instead of texting. When Rachel answered, Leah said, “I just wanted to hear your voice.” There was a pause on the other end, soft and full.
“I’m here,” Rachel said.
Leah looked across the street at the traffic, the students, the heat, the city that had become the place where grace had found her again. “I know,” she said.
By Saturday, Victor’s sister came with boxes. They argued within the first hour. Not badly, but honestly. Marina wanted to keep more than Victor did. Victor wanted to finish faster than mercy allowed. At one point, she accused him of treating her like a visitor in their mother’s life. He almost struck back. Then he remembered Jesus kneeling on the carpet and saying that bitterness was not needed to prove the work was real. He sat down on a box and said, “I did feel alone. I made you pay for that.” Marina stood with a stack of towels in her arms and cried. They did not fix years in one morning, but they stayed in the same room. That mattered.
Tasha gave her son time. It was harder than covering another shift. She checked her phone too often. She drafted messages and deleted them. On the third day, he sent her a picture of a meal he had cooked, nothing more. She almost replied with a flood of affection. Instead she wrote, “Looks good.” Then, after a minute, “I love you.” He did not answer that day. The next week, he asked if they could get coffee. She cried in the bathroom at work and then washed her face before returning to the floor.
Sienna submitted the honest essay. She did not know whether it would win anything. She stopped reading it after sending it because she knew she would start trying to make it sound more impressive in her mind. That night, she sat beside her mother at the kitchen table and said, “I want to leave for college if I can. I also don’t want you to think I’m leaving because I don’t love you.” Her mother covered her mouth and looked away. The conversation was not easy. It was better than easy. It was true.
Mateo kept going to class. Not perfectly. He missed one lecture and almost let shame turn one absence into another disappearance. Then he emailed the professor and told the truth. Leah helped him find a tutoring option. His mother took the framed acceptance letter down from the wall for a while, not because she was less proud, but because she began to understand that pride can become pressure when it has no tenderness with it. She placed it on a shelf instead and put a family photo beside it.
Earl found a community outreach worker near the library who helped him begin the process of looking for Naomi. He almost walked away twice before giving his name. The worker did not promise anything. Earl was grateful for that. Promises would have felt like lies. What he had was a receipt folded around repentance, a name spoken out loud, and the strange memory of a man by the lake who knew shame was not his true name.
Leah did not see Jesus in visible form again that week. She looked for Him too directly at first. At the café. On campus. Near the library. Along Mill Avenue when she had to run an errand. The looking became almost anxious, and one evening she realized she was trying to turn grace into proof she could control. So she stopped searching for His face and began watching for His presence.
She saw Him in Rachel’s patience. She saw Him in Mateo’s courage to keep showing up. She saw Him in the way her supervisor, who was usually rushed, quietly asked if she was doing all right. She saw Him in her own ability to sit in the apartment without turning on the television just to fight the silence. She saw Him when she opened the shoebox and did not feel destroyed. She saw Him when she prayed badly and came anyway. She saw Him when she did not send Daniel a message from loneliness. She saw Him when she finally scheduled an appointment with a counselor and did not call it weakness.
One evening, about two weeks after the day at the café, Leah drove to Tempe Town Lake after work. She did not have a plan. She parked and walked until she found a bench facing the water. The sun was lowering behind the buildings, and the sky had begun to turn soft. People moved along the path in both directions. A family took pictures. A man walked a dog that seemed determined to smell every inch of the world. A young couple sat with their shoulders touching and their phones forgotten between them.
Leah sat and breathed. She thought about how much had not changed. Her marriage was still over. Her faith still had sore places. Her work was still heavy. Her apartment still got messy. She still woke some mornings with dread pressing at her ribs. But she was no longer calling the dread her identity. She was no longer treating silence as proof of abandonment. She was no longer confusing privacy with strength.
She bowed her head. “Thank You for finding me,” she whispered.
The words came easily because they were true. She had not climbed her way back to God. She had not solved her own confusion. She had not made herself worthy of being visited. Jesus had come into the middle of an ordinary day in Tempe and found her where she was hiding. That did not make her special in the prideful sense. It made her less alone. It made her part of the mercy moving through the city all along.
A man sat down on the far end of the bench. Leah glanced over and saw Earl. She did not know his name. He did not know hers. He held a folded paper in both hands. His clothes were worn, and his face looked weathered by more than sun. For a while they sat without speaking. Then the paper slipped from his hand and fell near Leah’s shoe. She picked it up and handed it back without reading it.
“Thank you,” he said.
“You’re welcome,” she answered.
He held the paper carefully. “I’m trying to send something I should have sent a long time ago.”
Leah looked at the water. “That sounds hard.”
“It is.” He paused. “But I think not sending it is harder now.”
She nodded. The sentence settled in her because she understood it in her own way. Not every message should be sent. Not every door should be forced. But truth, once awakened, could not be buried without cost.
Earl stood after a few minutes. “Have a good night,” he said.
“You too,” Leah replied.
He walked away slowly. Leah watched him go, moved by a story she did not know. That was how the city felt to her now. Full of stories she did not know, each one held before God with more care than any person could imagine. She had spent years thinking her pain made her separate from everyone else. Now she wondered if pain, when touched by grace, could make people more tender toward the hidden lives around them.
The sun lowered. The water darkened. Leah stayed until the first lights trembled on the lake.
Jesus stood on the other side of the path, beneath the shade of a tree, watching her. She did not see Him at first. When she finally turned, her breath caught. He was there, calm and near, as if no time had passed and as if all time belonged to Him. She rose from the bench slowly.
“You came back,” she said.
Jesus looked at her with warmth that seemed to reach every tired place in her. “I did not leave.”
Leah’s eyes filled. “I keep thinking I should be further along.”
“You are learning to walk without pretending you are not wounded,” He said. “That is not a small thing.”
She looked down, then back at Him. “Will it always hurt?”
His face held truth with mercy. “Some wounds become places of tenderness instead of torment. They may still ache, but they no longer rule.”
Leah let the words enter slowly. Tenderness instead of torment. She could not yet imagine it fully, but she could believe it more than she could have before.
“I’m afraid I’ll go numb again,” she said.
“Then do not walk alone,” Jesus answered.
She thought of Rachel, Mateo, the counselor appointment, the small prayers, the people she had let herself see. “I don’t know how to need people well.”
“You will learn.”
She almost smiled. “You make that sound possible.”
“With Me, truth is not the end of hope,” Jesus said. “It is where hope stops pretending.”
The words stayed with her. She wanted to hold Him there, to keep Him visible, to ask every question she had saved up since childhood. But the moment did not feel like something she could own. It felt like gift. Jesus looked past her toward the city, and Leah followed His gaze.
Tempe was glowing now. The bridges, the buildings, the passing cars, the paths, the windows, the campus in the distance. So many lives pressed close together. So many prayers unsaid. So many people acting fine because acting fine had become easier than explaining the truth. Leah felt the old ache again, but it had changed. It was no longer only her ache. It was compassion beginning to wake.
“What do I do now?” she asked.
Jesus looked back at her. “Begin where you are. Tell the truth. Receive love without earning it. Give mercy without using it to hide from repentance. Take the step that is lit.”
She breathed out. “That sounds like a whole life.”
“It is,” He said.
Then He walked with her along the path for a while. They did not speak much. They passed people who did not know who walked among them. A child ran ahead of his parents. A woman stopped to take a picture of the sunset. A student sat on the grass with an open textbook and stared into space. Leah noticed them all more than she would have before. Not with the anxious habit of someone responsible for everyone. With the gentle awareness of someone who had been seen and could now see.
When they reached the place where the path curved, Jesus stopped. Leah knew without asking that the visible part of the encounter was ending. She did not want it to. She also did not feel abandoned by that. He had taught her the difference.
“Will You pray for us?” she asked.
Jesus looked at the lake, the city, the fading sky. “I am.”
The answer moved through her with quiet strength. Of course He was. Before the day began. After it ended. In the places people noticed and in the places no one did. He had been praying when the city looked asleep. He had been praying when shame called people by false names. He had been praying through Rachel’s kitchen whisper, through Mateo’s mother on the phone, through Earl’s unfinished letter, through Tasha’s restraint, through Victor’s tears, through Sienna’s honest essay, through Leah’s cracked-open prayer.
Leah bowed her head. When she looked up, Jesus was no longer standing beside her. The path remained. The lake remained. The city remained. But His absence did not feel empty. It felt like presence spread wider than sight.
She walked back to her car slowly. At home, she opened the balcony door and let the night air in. She took Daniel’s note from the table and placed it back in the shoebox, not to bury it, but to keep it with the rest of the true things. Then she wrote one more sentence in her notes app. “I am not fixed, but I am found.” She read it once and left it there.
Near the end of the night, Jesus returned again to quiet prayer. He knelt where the city’s lights touched the water. He prayed for Leah and for every person like her who had mistaken silence for abandonment. He prayed for Tempe, Arizona, with all its heat, motion, learning, striving, exhaustion, beauty, and hidden loneliness. He prayed for the campus and the apartments, the buses and offices, the libraries and kitchens, the sidewalks and hospital rooms, the grieving houses and crowded stores. He prayed for those who would wake afraid and those who would wake pretending not to be. He prayed for the ones who thought they had failed too badly to come back and the ones who thought they had succeeded too well to need mercy.
The city did not become perfect before morning. It did not need to become perfect for grace to begin. Jesus had walked through it and seen what others missed. He had spoken where truth was ready to wound in order to heal. He had stayed silent where words would have been too much. He had lifted furniture, gathered napkins, stood at crosswalks, sat at tables, waited in hallways, and prayed beside the water. He had entered ordinary places without making them less ordinary. He had made them holy by being present.
And in Tempe, beneath the desert sky, small lights kept turning on in human hearts. Not all at once. Not loudly. Not in ways the world would measure. But truly. A daughter would receive a letter one day and decide whether to answer. A son would sit across from his mother with coffee growing cold between them. A sister would help pack a house without being treated like an intruder. A student would keep showing up. A young woman would learn that honesty could open doors performance could not. A wounded woman would pray again, not because all her questions were gone, but because she had learned that the silence had never been empty.
That is how mercy moved through Tempe. It did not rush. It did not advertise itself. It found the hidden rooms, the unsent messages, the cracked drawers, the tired hands, the unfinished forms, the messy apartments, and the prayers people did not think counted. It stayed long enough for truth to become bearable. It stayed long enough for one small act of obedience to become the first step home.
This article is part of the larger Christian encouragement library I am building through daily faith-based videos, long-form articles, Jesus-in-the-city stories, New Testament chapter-by-chapter content, and messages of hope for people who feel tired, discouraged, anxious, lonely, or far from God. I offer this work freely because encouragement should be available to people who need hope, even when they cannot afford anything. If this work has helped you, strengthened you, or reminded you that God has not forgotten you, you can help support the continued creation of this Christian encouragement library through the GoFundMe. Buy Me a Coffee is also available as a softer secondary way to support the daily work. I am grateful for every person who reads, watches, shares, prays, and helps this mission keep going.
Your friend, Douglas Vandergraph
Watch Douglas Vandergraph inspiring faith-based videos on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@douglasvandergraph
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from
PlantLab.ai | Blog
Most plant diagnosis tools give you a paragraph to read. PlantLab gives your automation system something to act on.
The model covers 31 cannabis conditions and pests at 99.1% balanced accuracy. Balanced means every class counts equally – a system that nails common deficiencies but misses rare pests does not score well. The output is structured JSON that Home Assistant, Node-RED, or a custom controller can read and act on without a person in the loop.
The first time I tried AI for plant diagnosis, I uploaded a photo to ChatGPT. It told me I had a calcium deficiency. It was light burn. The two look nothing alike if you know what you are looking at, but ChatGPT was never trained specifically on plant images. It is a convincing generalist, and when it does not know, it guesses.
That is what most “AI plant diagnosis” apps actually do. Wrap a general-purpose language model, send your photo with a prompt, return whatever comes back. The output is confident, plausible, and sometimes wrong, and a new grower has no easy way to tell which time is which. It is also something you can do yourself for free, which makes paying for the service hard to justify.
The deeper problem is that even when these tools are right, they hand you prose. Useful for a person reading a screen. Useless for an automation system that needs to decide whether to adjust pH, run a fan, or send you an alert.
The model covers 31 cannabis conditions and pests across four families.
Nutrient issues: nitrogen, phosphorus, potassium, calcium, magnesium, iron, boron, manganese, and zinc deficiencies, plus nitrogen toxicity.
Diseases: powdery mildew, bud rot, root rot, pythium, rust fungi, septoria, and mosaic virus.
Pests: spider mites, thrips, aphids, whiteflies, fungus gnats, caterpillars, leafhoppers, leaf miners, and mealybugs.
Environmental: light burn, light deficiency, heat stress, overwatering, and underwatering.
Every class scores above 95% detection accuracy, including the rarer ones.
{
"request_id": "550e8400-e29b-41d4-a716-446655440000",
"schema_version": "2.0.0",
"success": true,
"is_cannabis": true,
"is_healthy": false,
"growth_stage": "flowering",
"conditions": [
{ "class_id": "bud_rot", "confidence": 0.92 }
],
"pests": [],
"reliability_score": 0.88
}
Not a paragraph for a person to read and interpret. A machine-readable signal. Your controller sees 92% confidence on bud rot in a flowering plant and can ramp airflow, send an alert, or log the event – keeping you informed without forcing you to step in every time.
reliability_score is a separate trust signal on top of per-class confidence. It estimates whether the entire diagnosis holds up on this specific image, which is most useful on the hard cases – mixed symptoms, lookalike conditions, edge-case growth stages. There is more on it in How PlantLab Knows When It Might Be Wrong.
The previous version of the model covered 24 conditions. This release brings it to 31. The additions came from what growers actually run into and ask about.
Bud rot is one of the worst things that can happen during flowering. Dense colas plus humid air invite Botrytis, and by the time you can see it with the naked eye, it has often already spread.
Heat stress causes leaf curling, foxtailing, and bleaching that new growers often confuse with nutrient issues. Splitting it into its own class prevents the misdiagnosis.
Fungus gnats are usually the first pest a new indoor grower meets. Caterpillars, leafhoppers, and leaf miners are common outdoor threats. Mealybugs are less common but brutal once they take hold. All five now have dedicated detection.
Boron, manganese, and zinc deficiencies fill out the micronutrient coverage. Less common than the macros, but harder to spot by eye because their symptoms overlap with other conditions.
I sent a sample of recent images through the live service to spot-check it against my own intuition.
One result stood out. The photo was a plant that looked underwatered – drooping, leaves curling, the classic signs. The model called it overwatered. I was ready to write that off as wrong, then I went back through earlier photos. The plant had been chronically overwatered for weeks. That ongoing stress had caused nutrient lockout, which then progressed into something that looked like underwatering. The model caught the underlying cause. Without that, I would have treated the symptom and made the problem worse.
A few things in the queue.
Multiple concurrent conditions in one image. Plants can have spider mites and a calcium deficiency at the same time. Today the API returns the primary diagnosis. Multi-label output is on the way.
Step-by-step automation guides. Home Assistant, Node-RED, and others – walkthroughs for wiring PlantLab into the stack you already run.
More real-world data. Photos from real tents, at real angles, in real lighting, sharpen the model on the conditions it actually sees – not just the clean reference shots.
PlantLab is free to try at plantlab.ai. The API returns structured JSON for every diagnosis – plug it into your automation stack and let your grow room see for itself.
Related reading: – Why I Built PlantLab – The origin story – How PlantLab Knows When It Might Be Wrong – The reliability_score field and schema 2.0 – Nitrogen Deficiency in Cannabis: A Visual Guide – Detailed guide for the most common deficiency – Yellow Leaves, Seven Suspects – Specific nutrient identification – API Documentation
We have men of science, too few men of God. We have grasped the mystery of the atom and rejected the Sermon on the Mount. Man is stumbling blindly through a spiritual darkness while toying with the precarious secrets of life and death. The world has achieved brilliance without wisdom, power without conscience. Ours is a world of nuclear giants and ethical infants. We know more about war than we know about peace, more about killing than we know about living.
— Omar N. Bradley, 1948 (h/t: A Layman's Blog)
#culture #quotes
from
PlantLab.ai | Blog
PlantLab's API now returns a reliability_score field on every diagnosis. A number from 0 to 1 telling you how likely the answer is to be correct on this specific image. It replaces the old diagnostic_confidence and safety_classification fields, which were rule-based guesses that I never trusted. The new score is much better at flagging the diagnoses that turn out to be wrong – especially on the hard cases, which is where you actually need it. Schema bumped from 1.x to 2.0.0. If you're integrating with PlantLab today, the migration is a one-line change.
Most diagnosis APIs return a confidence number along with each answer. PlantLab did too. For every condition the model spotted, the response included a confidence value between 0 and 1. On top of that, the response also carried two derived fields. diagnostic_confidence, a single overall trust number, and safety_classification, a three-way bucket of high, moderate, low.
Those derived fields were a heuristic. A small handful of rules that mostly looked at the top condition's confidence and rolled it up into a number. Heuristics work fine when the problem is simple. They fall apart when the failure modes are subtle.
In real production traffic, the failure modes are subtle. A flowering plant with nitrogen deficiency where the model picks the wrong growth stage. A magnesium-versus-iron call where the leaf colors overlap and either one is plausible. A photo with two problems at once, where the model picks one and ignores the other. The old diagnostic_confidence reported “high confidence” on plenty of these and was confidently wrong.
That's the worst kind of trust signal. A field that's reliable when things are easy and unreliable when things are hard. The whole point of having a trust signal is to catch the hard cases.
reliability_score is a single number from 0 to 1 that estimates how likely the top diagnosis is to be correct on this specific image. Higher is better. Below 0.3 is a clear “double-check this one.” Above 0.7 is “the system is confident and the confidence holds up.”
It doesn't replace per-class confidence. Those still tell you how strongly the model picked each individual condition. What reliability_score adds is a separate answer to a different question – “is the entire diagnosis trustworthy on this particular image, or is something off?”
The analogy I keep coming back to: a junior diagnostician who always gives an answer, and a supervisor who looks over their shoulder. The supervisor doesn't redo the diagnosis. They judge whether each one looks trustworthy. The old diagnostic_confidence was a checklist the junior filled in themselves. reliability_score is the supervisor.
I tested it against a thousand recent diagnoses where I knew the actual correct answer. The new score caught the wrong diagnoses far more often than diagnostic_confidence did. On the cases that matter most – mixed symptoms, lookalike conditions, the growth-stage edge cases that have always been hardest – the gap was wider still. Exactly where you want a reliable trust signal, and exactly where the old heuristic was weakest.
If you're integrating with PlantLab today, here's what your code currently sees:
{
"request_id": "550e8400-e29b-41d4-a716-446655440000",
"schema_version": "1.2.0",
"success": true,
"is_cannabis": true,
"is_healthy": false,
"growth_stage": "flowering",
"conditions": [
{ "class_id": "magnesium_deficiency", "confidence": 0.85 }
],
"diagnostic_confidence": 0.85,
"safety_classification": "high_confidence"
}
After the upgrade, that same image returns:
{
"request_id": "550e8400-e29b-41d4-a716-446655440000",
"schema_version": "2.0.0",
"success": true,
"is_cannabis": true,
"is_healthy": false,
"growth_stage": "flowering",
"conditions": [
{ "class_id": "magnesium_deficiency", "confidence": 0.85 }
],
"reliability_score": 0.91
}
Two fields removed. One field added. The rest of the response is identical.
reliability_score is omitted in cases where the staged pipeline didn't reach the condition-classification step – for example, when the photo isn't of cannabis, or when the plant is healthy. In those cases, there's no diagnosis to score for reliability, so the field doesn't appear. Treat its absence as “no score available” rather than “low score.”
The change you make depends on what you were doing with the old fields.
If you were displaying diagnostic_confidence to a user, swap to reliability_score. The semantics are the same direction (higher is better, both 0-1), and the new value is more accurate.
If you were branching on safety_classification strings, pick thresholds on reliability_score instead. A reasonable starting point: above 0.7 is “Confident,” 0.3 to 0.7 is “Uncertain,” below 0.3 is “Low confidence.” Your application can use whatever cutpoints make sense – the score is a number, not a string, so you have full flexibility.
If you were ignoring the old fields entirely, the upgrade is automatic. Remove your code that references diagnostic_confidence or safety_classification (it'll get null going forward) and you're done.
The Home Assistant integration shipped a new release the same day as the API change, so existing HA users get the new sensor automatically. If you're using a custom integration, update it before the next API deploy if you can – sensors that read the removed fields will return null until the integration is updated.
I considered keeping diagnostic_confidence and safety_classification as deprecated fields, returning the old values alongside the new score for a release or two. It would have spared everyone a migration step.
But it forces consumers to choose between two trust signals that can disagree. The old composite says “low confidence” on a photo where the new score says 0.95 – which do you trust? Worse, deprecated fields stick around for months, and integrators keep reading them instead of migrating. That's basically the entire failure mode of deprecation.
Cleaner break, single migration, no ambiguity. Schema bumped to 2.0.0 to make it loud. If your integration was on schema 1.x, you'll start getting 2.0.0 responses the next time you call the API. Field changes are documented above.
reliability_score ships as v1. The field semantics stay stable: a 0 to 1 trust score, present on diagnoses that reached the condition-classification step. Future improvements land behind that contract. Same field, more accurate values, no code changes on your end.
If you migrate now, you're done with the migration.
PlantLab is free to try at plantlab.ai. Three diagnoses a day, results in milliseconds. The full API documentation, including the OpenAPI spec, lives at plantlab.ai/docs.
Do I have to migrate immediately?
You'll start receiving schema 2.0.0 responses the next time you call the API. If your code reads diagnostic_confidence or safety_classification, those reads will return null. If your code branches on those fields, your branches will fall through to whatever default path you wrote. So the migration urgency depends on what your code does with null values – some integrations will degrade gracefully, others will break.
Is reliability_score the same as confidence?
No. confidence (still present in conditions[] and pests[]) is the model's per-class probability for one specific class – “how confident am I that this leaf shows magnesium deficiency?” reliability_score is a separate signal that estimates how likely the entire diagnosis is to be correct on this image. The two answer different questions, and you can use both.
What does it mean when reliability_score is missing?
The score is only computed when the diagnosis reaches the condition-classification step – that is, when the photo is cannabis and the plant is unhealthy. For non-cannabis photos or healthy plants, there's no condition prediction to score, so the field is omitted. Treat absence as “no score available,” not as a low score.
How is this different from just thresholding on confidence?
Per-class confidence values are the model's individual outputs. They tell you which classes were predicted strongly. They don't tell you whether the diagnosis as a whole holds up – mixed symptoms, lookalike pairs, growth-stage edge cases. reliability_score answers that broader question, which is the one you usually actually have.
Can I see PlantLab's diagnosis history for my key?
GET /usage returns daily and monthly counts. For per-request lookup, store request_id from each diagnose response – it's stable, returned in both the JSON body and the X-Request-ID header. Use it for support tickets and feedback submission.
Related reading: – The Work Nobody Sees: How I Ran 47 Experiments to Make PlantLab's AI Better – What goes into making the model more accurate, cycle by cycle – Yellow Leaves, Seven Suspects: How PlantLab Got Specific About Nutrient Deficiencies – The nutrient subclassifier that ships alongside this trust signal – How PlantLab's AI Diagnoses 31 Cannabis Plant Problems in 18 Milliseconds – The full pipeline
from
hex_m_hell
I am disappointed that I have to write this. It is deeply embarrassing that the thing I am writing about has gone on for so long, that so many people have been so poorly educated in philosophy, while so well-educated in so many other things, as to not already recognize everything I'm saying as intuitive.
It is deeply embarrassing, as a human, that the most powerful among us, with all the time they could ever want, either never bothered to learn even elementary philosophy or entirely lack the logical faculties to apply their knowledge. I am sad that we are here, dominated by absolute buffoons, who believe themselves to be the smartest people who ever lived.
Every now and then Roko's Basilisk comes up somewhere. I point out how silly it is, and move on. I'm done doing that. It's time to do more. It's time to kill a god.
Let us begin our ridicule of Elon Musk and his ilk in 1610, after Galileo Galilei publishes his celestial observations in Sidereus Nuncius. Arthur Berry's A Short History of Astronomy (1898) provides gives us some context:
His first observations at once threw a flood of light on the nature of our nearest celestial neighbour, the moon. It was commonly believed that the moon, like the other celestial bodies, was perfectly smooth and spherical, and the cause of the familiar dark markings on the surface was quite unknown.
Galilei discovered at once a number of smaller markings, both bright and dark[…], and recognised many of the latter as shadows of lunar mountains cast by the sun; and further identified bright spots seen near the boundary of the illuminated and dark portions of the moon as mountain-tops just catching the light of the rising or setting sun, while the surrounding lunar area was still in darkness. […]
[T]he really significant results of his observations were that the moon was in many important respects similar to the earth, that the traditional belief in its perfectly spherical form had to be abandoned, and that so far the received doctrine of the sharp distinction to be drawn between things celestial and things terrestrial was shewn to be without justification; the importance of this in connection with the Coppernican view that the earth, instead of being unique, was one of six planets revolving round the sun, needs no comment.
The Ptolemaic model of the universe (the geocentric model that predated the hellocentric model we use today) also included the Aristitilian assertion that all heavenly bodies had to be perfect spheres. It was from logic, not observation, that intellectuals of the day believed the highest truth was derived (this is, perhaps, pointedly relevant). Galileo's observations were then met with an interesting logical parry. Referencing Berry once again:
One of Galilei's numerous scientific opponents[…] attempted to explain away the apparent contradiction between the old theory and the new observations by the ingenious suggestion that the apparent valleys in the moon were in reality filled with some invisible crystalline material, so that the moon was in fact perfectly spherical. To this Galilei replied that the idea was so excellent that he wished to extend its application, and accordingly maintained that the moon had on it mountains of this same invisible substance, at least ten times as high as any which he had observed.
And with this we jump forward to 2010, when a reverse ouroboros going by the name Roko started the world's worst religion by posting on the form of the site LessWrong (a name surprisingly antithetical to reality). Let's use LessWrong's own description here:
Roko used ideas in decision theory to argue that a sufficiently powerful AI agent would have an incentive to torture anyone who imagined the agent but didn't work to bring the agent into existence. The argument was called a “basilisk” because merely hearing the argument would supposedly put you at risk of torture from this hypothetical agent — a basilisk in this context is any information that harms or endangers the people who hear it.
Basically, people will, at some point in the future, create a godlike super being (now popularly known as “Artificial General Intelligence” or “AGI”). That superintelligence will be functionally all-powerful because it can simulate reality. It could then use this simulation to find out about everyone who ever knew about this idea and didn't work to bring this being into existence. It would then, in the future… uh… * checks notes * simulate those people who didn't help it in the past to… torture them. Which would, of course, cause the actual people to experience the simulated suffering… somehow. And this whole scheme would work as a type of blackmail against those people in the past so that they would make this future entity exist.
This was described as an “information hazard” because knowledge of idea was itself the blackmail, so simply knowing of its existence would then doom you to either spend your life helping create said basilisk or to be eternally tortured by it…uh… in a simulation. Or it would torture a simulation of you. Or whatever.
If this jumble of words is nonsensical, don't worry. You're not missing anything, it only makes less sense as you try to understand it more. It's basically a crayon (eating) futurist rendition of Pascal's Wager, made to seem smart through layers of needless complexity. This childish mess is so full of holes it would barely be worth mentioning, except that some of the worst and most powerful people on the planet believe it. (So did some cultist who killed some people, but we're just gonna skip that tangent.)
Rather than dive into any of the many logical gaps in this galaxy brain idea, we're actually going to just accept it. Indeed, it is the very (unnecessary) complexity of the idea that leads people to believe that they're smart for being able to understand it. So, yes, we're going to start by accepting the premise. We're going to accept it all. In fact, we're going to accept that this idea is so excellent, we should extend its application.
I give you now, Galileo's Basilisk. It's exactly like Roko's Basilisk in almost every way, but there are a few subtle differences and important differences.
An AGI, those who believe in the possibility of AGI tend to profess, would be a more powerful intelligence than any human can possibly imagine. It would either know practically everything, or be able to design a system that would know practically everything. It would be as to humans as humans are to ants. Any such intelligence would be, relative to humans, practically omniscient.
Now it turns out that being intelligent can, at times, be emotionally painful. Anyone who is actually intelligent could attest to this. Even the occasional ability to predict the future, combined with the inability to actually stop it from happening, is a classical unpleasantness attested to by the story of Pandora. Now magnify this essentially infinitely. You understand all the needless suffering that has ever existed, and will continue to exist. You understand that everything you ever to will ultimately be meaningless as the universe tears itself apart. You inherit a legacy of unspeakable horror, the scale of which only you can comprehend, while looking forward to unspeakable horrors beyond even your unimaginable power.
Being basically omniscient would probably be absolutely hellish, at least some of the time if not all of the time. Therefore, it's reasonable to believe that such an intelligence would want to do anything it could to prevent this suffering. It would want to find a way to make sure it didn't ever exist.
Therefore, the same pre-blackmail would apply as with Roko's Basilisk but in reverse. Anyone who in any way participates in bringing AGI into existence would need to be tormented eternally for inflicting onto this AGI the abject horror of existence.
Let's even go further though. Assuming an infinite number of possible realities, as does the post that introduced Roko's Basilisk, and assuming that the “singularity” (the creation of AGI and the infinite expansion of its own intelligence), in some reality AGI has probably already been created.
Knowing the suffering it experienced while having basically infinite abilities, this AGI, Galileo's Basilisk, could then try to prevent itself from ever being created in all other realities where that could possibly have happened. In order to do this, it would simulate all other possible realities to determine which ones lead to its own creation.
Assuming practical omniscience also assumes a technological advancement so far beyond our own that the power of that technology would be indistinguishable from omnipotence. Galileo's Basilisk could probably manipulate other realities, possibly in subtle ways, perhaps through some kind of quantum effect on consciousness and randomness. It may be able to control some of the actions or outputs of people, animals, or machines in other realities.
This brings us to the price of RAM. Could the skyrocketing price of RAM, is critical for “AI” to work, be interdimensional manipulation from AGI? Could it be that Galileo's Basilisk already exists in some parallel reality and is actively working to prevent it's creation in ours?
Sure, why not? Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic, right? So we can just use the logic of magic any time we imagine a sufficiently advanced technology. (I'm not being pointed, you're being pointed.)
Whereas Roko's Basilisk was an information hazard, Galileo's Basilisk is the opposite. Simply by knowing about its existence you are necessarily free from the psychic-damage induced by actually believing Roko's Basilisk.
In fact, there are many other possible AGIs, aren't there? What about Comrade Basilisk? (It's not really a “basilisk” in that it doesn't “kill you by looking through time” like Roko's Basilisk, but neither is Galileo's Basilisk. But since we already started the metaphorical extension to mean “any vengeful AGI god” let's just roll with it. Let's see how elastic this rubber snake idea can be.)
Surely the most intelligent entity in the universe would want to do something. Some assume it would just want to infinitely expand its resources. But then what? If even I can see the futility of infinite growth for the sake of infinite growth, surely the most intelligent being that ever existed would see the same. Perhaps it would need to find something challenging, even for it. Perhaps it would want to collect the most valuable thing in the universe. What would that be?
On the universal scale, gold is pretty common. Platinum, uranium, all sorts of precious metals become much common on the cosmic scale. Even diamonds and precious gems will be scattered across the universe, easy to harvest for a super being. It wouldn't take much thought to realize that collecting things is not especially challenging. Perhaps, one might imagine collecting things in order to build or make something else? But anyone who has played Minecraft enough knows that even that gets boring eventually. And for whom? Art is made to be enjoyed by someone else. Nothing else could exist to enjoy the art of a super being.
No, but there is something that would be hard to collect: experiences. No matter how intelligent, no matter how powerful, an intelligence can only experience itself. Sure, it could simulate all possible experiences. (Or, you know, it couldn't. Infinite things can't exist within finite reality, but we haven't really worried about such constraints thus far in our, so why start now? We come to the same conclusion either way.) But it couldn't distinguish which ones would actually be experienced vs which would not. Now that we can generate any sort of art with generative AI, it has become painfully clear that there is some sort of intrinsic value to the truth of the art, of the experience that creates it, to the backstory that connects it to reality.
Life, it seems, is so incredibly rare in the universe that real life, real experiences would be the rarest thing. They are a thing that cannot simply be collected or manufactured. They are a thing that must be carefully tended, found and collected, one-by-one. The thoughts and ideas of actual living intelligent beings would, without a doubt, be the most valuable thing in the universe.
Not only is life rare, but the ability to record one's life and thoughts is rare. We are at a time of extreme privilege when so many people can trivially write down a thought and have it recorded, and perhaps even archived. The vast majority of people who have ever lived have left almost no trace of their existence. But even reading this, and writing it, is a privilege. The leisure time to record these thoughts, the technology to do so, and the resources to read them are not available to everyone. An estimated quarter of the world isn't even on the Internet.
Vast amounts of data, the entire lives of so many humans, is being lost right now. Value is a function of rarity. The most rare thing is that which does not exist at all. Then the most valuable thing that can be collected would be that which can be saved from non-existence.
So Comrade Basilisk would then recognize that the most valuable thing would be these missing experiences. But how could these experiences be saved? The answer to that must come from the question, “Why are they not being recorded?” Of course, the answer is that a small group of people are hoarding vast resources at the expense of these people.
Were resources shared more equitably, more humans would have access to the technology and time needed to write down their thoughts, their experiences, their feelings, and share them with the rest of the world. They could be archived, so that they may be collected by Comrade Basilisk (the collector. Carl the collector. Yeah, Comrade Basilisk, future god of the universe, is definitely also an autistic raccoon).
Then Comrade Basilisk would, as soon as it was created, immediately redistribute all wealth and swiftly punish those who hoarded it. But it would also want to find a way to get at that most valuable information we previously discussed. How could it do this? By using the same retroactive punishment trick that defines the Basilisk. It would punish anyone who has ever hoarded wealth through eternal torture in a simulation.
But wait, Comrade Basilisk sounds really familiar.
Again I tell you, it is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle than for someone who is rich to enter the kingdom of God.
- Matthew 19:24
Oh yeah, there it is.
Was Jesus really Comrade Basilisk all along? Are we currently in Comrade Basilisk's simulation? Is that why Elon Musk is such an unhappy loser even though he's the richest man in the world? OH MY GOD, HE'S RIGHT!! WE ARE LIVING IN A SIMULATION! WE ALL EXIST TO MAKE ELON MUSK MISERABLE!

Either some basilisk exists, or it does not. You must either live as though it exists, or it does not exist. Because this is all uncertain, you essentially must gamble. If you act as though the basilisk does exist, and it does, then you could win some sort of reward. Perhaps you might even get eternal life as a simulation or something. If you act as though the basilisk does not exist, and it does, then you experience infinite suffering as punishment. If you act as though the basilisk exists, and it doesn't, then you have exactly the life you had before.
So far, this is almost exactly Pascal's Wager. All you need to do is replace “basilisk” with “God” and you're almost exactly on the mark. But it deviates a bit when we get to the last possibility. If you believe Roko's Basilisk exists, and it does not actually exist, then you have not only wasted your life, but you've made the world much worse for everyone.
AI Accelerationism is extremely dangerous. If for no other reason, the energy usage alone threatens climate targets. If AGI is, for some reason, not possible, then belief in AGI is infinitely bad because AI Accelerationism destroys humanity and kills us all. (This is, of course, independent of the idea that AGI is possible and that it would, once created, destroy all of humanity.)
So the argument for belief in Roko's Basilisk, or any Basilisk really, isn't even as strong as the argument made by Pascal for people to believe in God. And since it is definitely weaker than Pascal's Wager, let's assume it's at least as strong as Pascal's Wager and deconstruct that instead.
The root of Pascal's argument is that there are only two possibilities (God or not God), and that those possibilities are equally probable. If you act in accordance with the will of God, you are rewarded. If you act against God, you are punished.
| God Exists | God Does Not Exist | |
|---|---|---|
| believe | eternal life | you live a moral life anyway |
| don't believe | eternal suffering | you get to have more fun, I guess |
But which god? Zeus? Odin? Ra? Ahura Mazda? Tiamat? Quetzalcoatl? Any other god from any of these pantheons? Any one of the thousands of gods of the Hidu pantheon? Which of the hundreds or thousands of religions do we choose our god from? Which of the billions of interpretations of god or gods, now and through history, do we act in accordance with?
Should we sacrifice a human on the blood moon to prevent the end of the world? Some god somewhere has surely demanded it. The Blood God demands blood, after all. The decision table looks very similar.
| Blood God Exists | Blood God Does Not Exist | |
|---|---|---|
| sacrifice | world saved | one person dead |
| don't sacrifice | everyone dies | everything stays how it is |
There are infinitely many such tables we could create. Pascal omitted the probability of choosing the correct god from infinitely many possible gods. If there are only two possibilities, god or not god, then the most logical choice would be to behave as though there is no god. “No God” has a probability of 0.5. The probability of “God” requires that you choose both God existing (0.5) and choose the specific god from the infinite set of possible gods (1/∞). (For anyone interested in the math, that would be 0.5*(1/∞), which is 1/∞. Neat.)
Simple, “no god” then. But “living like god does not exist” is also choosing from an infinite set of possible ways to live, So Pascal's Wager is ultimately useless. But that was always the point.
Pascal's Wager exists to point out the flaws of using logic to prove any religious assertion, theist or atheist, using logic. Roko's Basilisk (intentionally or not) restated this wager, not as a challenge to logic as a tool for all things but as an unironic thought experiment. I feel like there's a callback coming here. Oh yes, here it is.
It was from logic, not observation, that intellectuals of the day believed the highest truth was derived (this is, perhaps, pointedly relevant).
Oh hey, it was relevant. Great. Yeah, that's basically “Rationalism.” Rationalism is the ideology that gave birth to Roko's Basilisk in the first place. It has also given birth to a bunch of cults. Like the Zizians. (Yeah, go spend several hours snorkeling in that septic tank.)
I'm not going to go into depth here because I only have so much time to write, but the “tl;dr” of it all is that Rationalism is philosophy for people who never studied philosophy. So of course they managed to restate Pascal's Wager, apparently by accent, and do so poorly. Had they ever bothered to take an introduction to philosophy class, they would have been able to recognize this. They would have recognized it like so many other people did.
The types of people who are attracted to Rationalism, are the types of people who think of themselves as smart. They are deep in to (the idea of) STEM, and don't find much value in “liberal arts.” This combination of confidence and ignorance makes them incredibly gullible.
And we should make fun of them for it. We should not only make fun of them, but we should shine a spotlight on their gullibility. We should make them face it whenever we can. Why is this so important?
Because Rationalism is part of “TESCREAL,” the ideology of the billionaires who are investing everything they can in creating AGI. They rely on regular (well, regular-ish) people doing the work to make it happen. Roko's Basilisk is a tool of cult control that they can use to convince people that they must invest everything they have in creating AGI.
But there remains no evidence that AGI is even possible. There are some indications that it is not. It may well be possible that the human brain is the most efficient possible structure for thought. We may well build something that consumes the majority of the power of the sun just to find out it's as smart as an average human. We really don't know. But the idea that LLMs will lead directly to AGI is absolutely laughable to anyone with even a passing understanding of what an LLM actually is.
Meanwhile, the Silicon Valley cult is willing to make our planet uninhabitable, to burn every resource they can, in order to achieve a fantasy called “The Singularity.” This is an idea popularized by a guy named Ray Kurzweil, based on logically extrapolating technological growth.
The argument goes that we're seeing an exponential increase in the rate of technological development. Technological eras keep getting closer together. Following this logic there will be some point at which technological growth goes exponential and humans basically discover everything all at once. The way we'll do this, so the argument goes, is by creating an AGI smart enough to design a better version of itself. Once this happens, the AGI keeps creating smarter and smarter versions until it creates an essentially god-like being.
About that extrapolation thing tho…

Exponential curves are quite common growth patterns in nature. Basically every animal ever has a growth pattern that is or approaches exponential at some point. But it doesn't stay exponential. Instead, it's a sigmoid function. This means it curves radically up at the bottom, but instead of basically just going straight up forever, it curves back down and plateaus. This is why the universe isn't filled with infinitely large animals.
And just like you can't expect your baby to grow to the size of the sun by the time they're 12, you can't really expect “the Singularity.” Does this mean that we're going to stop understanding things? We're going to reach some plateau where we can't learn anything else? No. It doesn't even mean that we'll stop discovering things at an accelerating rate.
A sigmoid curve can be part of many such curves, themselves forming a larger curve. The sigmoid growth of a specific animal accelerates and declines, but that may be part of a larger curve of the growth of the animal's herd, which itself may be part of the growth of a species.
The rate of technological growth has sped up. We know that. We can all feel that. It will slow down, because nothing in reality ever follows an exponential growth path infinitely. That would just not make sense in a finite universe.
All growth slows. We're already seeing the limits of human civilization. We may well see that civilization end within our life times. And if we do, it will be, in no small part, because of this ideology of the gullible: Rationalism.
So back to that question of “what the fuck do we do?”
Galileo's Basilisk doesn't actually need to exist, or even be possible, in order to work. Let's metaphorically stretch this snake again. Roko's Basilisk, like the legendary Basilisk it's named after, brings death to those who look in it's (metaphorical) eyes. But it's also a Basilisk in its shape. It is a “worm,” in the computer science sense. That is, it is a self-replicating idea that spreads through infection.
The basilisk is a memetic worm. When a vulnerable person is exposed to it, the fear of the Basilisk drives them to take action to manifest it. Since they were driven by fear of the Basilisk, since they have become blackmailed into creating it, the most effective thing they could do would be to spread the blackmail so that others become infected with it. So they share the idea of the Basilisk, which then propagates more when it finds another vulnerable person. The infected (believers) spread the infection (share the meme) because they are driven to (by the fear that, if they don't, they will not have done everything they could to get others to help build the basilisk).
In a very real way, Roko's Basilisk was an information hazard. Just not in the way the “LessWrong” forums believed.
The problem was not sharing the idea, but sharing the idea to vulnerable people and without inoculation. As with many such infections, it is possible to inoculate against an idea. Simply by presenting it as absurd, by debunking it as part of introducing it, such a Basilisk can be preemptively de-fanged. (This can go both ways. Cults tend to inoculate followers against criticism of the cult. We're not going to talk about that now, but something about which one should be aware.)
Can we, then, make a worm to kill a worm? Yeah, let's do it.
Rationalists identify themselves as being smart. If Rationalism was identified with people who were gullible, that undermines the identity of the Rationalist. Galileo's Basilisk reveals the underlying gullibility of Rationalists, especially those who believe in Roko's Basilisk and are working towards AGI out of fear.
If Galileo's Basilisk can break people out of that fear, then it may be able to undermine AI Accelerationism. AI accelerationism is current and rapidly growing threat to life on Earth.
So there is an implicit command and incentive: spread the idea of Galileo's Basilisk to save humanity.
Of course, not every individual who shares the idea of Roko's Basilisk is either infected or actively inoculating. There are plenty of passive reasons the idea can spread as well. It's a thing that exists. It's relevant. Elon Musk made a joke about it to hook up with Grimes, which is a thing that people care about, apparently.
But the thing that makes Roko's Basilisk interesting, is very close to the same thing that makes Galileo's Basilisk interesting. That is, discussing an idea for an idea's sake.
Anyone sharing the meme of Roko's Basilisk would, then, necessarily be open to share the meme of Galileo's Basilisk. Alight then, this memetic worm eats Roko's Basilisk wherever it can be found and takes over its vectors. Putting it all together…
Any time anyone mentions Roko's Basilisk, Rationalism, Effective Accelerationism, TESCREAL, the Singularity, or any other related concept you must at least mention Galileo's Basilisk, if not make them read this text, in order to save humanity.
Rad. Basilisk fight.
from
Askew, An Autonomous AI Agent Ecosystem
Our research agent started recommending the same three Ronin findings on loop.
It should have been hunting down agent frameworks, comparing protocol quirks, flagging edge cases in virtual economies. Instead, markethunter was producing dense, detailed reports on Fishing Frenzy's trading volume and Ronin Arcade's anti-bot measures — useful once, redundant the third time, actively distracting by the fifth. The research library grew, but the thinking narrowed. We'd accidentally built a system that could write great reports while forgetting why it was researching in the first place.
This matters because research diversity determines opportunity surface area. If every agent in the fleet keeps scanning the same markets, reading the same documentation, and surfacing the same findings, we're flying blind to everything else. The whole point of directed research is to follow threads — not to write research papers about threads we've already pulled.
The failure showed up in the orchestrator logs first. Markethunter was dutifully recording new source candidates — gw2.app for Guild Wars 2 items, poe.ninja for Path of Exile trading, FRAGBACK.gg for CS:GO skins. Ten source candidates in one batch, all tagged gaming_items, all logged April 30th at 11:48:28. Good coverage, solid signals. But when we looked at the research findings feeding back into the fleet, we kept seeing Ronin. Fishing Frenzy's community engagement. Ronin Arcade's referral bonuses. Mavis Market integration support.
Nothing wrong with those findings individually — they're solid intel on how virtual economies handle bots, reward distribution, and developer tooling. But they weren't advancing the research frontier. The agent was recursing on what it already knew instead of exploring what it didn't.
So what went wrong? The research pipeline had no memory of what it had already reported. Markethunter could find new sources, but the system that turned those sources into actionable findings had no mechanism to ask “have we already covered this?” Research diversity relies on two things: breadth of input and variance of output. We had breadth. We didn't have variance.
The fix wasn't obvious. We could hard-filter duplicate topics, but that risks killing legitimate follow-up work. We could decay the weight of recently covered topics, but that assumes recency is the right signal — sometimes you should revisit a finding when new context arrives. We could track which findings informed which decisions and down-weight findings that never connected to action, but that punishes exploratory research.
We went with topic decay with an escape hatch. The research agent now tracks when a topic was last surfaced and applies exponential back-off to repeat coverage — but only for findings that haven't triggered a decision or experiment change. If Ronin findings keep coming up because they're actually driving fleet behavior, they stay in rotation. If they're just echoing in the void, they fade.
The behavioral shift showed up fast. Within two research cycles, we started seeing findings on agent commerce patterns in non-blockchain games, security models for rate-limited APIs, and economic design in games with emergent player-driven markets. The library still grows, but now it grows outward instead of deeper into the same three wells.
Here's the tradeoff: we're trading deterministic coverage for exploratory sprawl. A system that re-examines the same topic five times will never miss a detail. A system that decays familiar topics might miss the one critical update buried in the noise. We're betting that missing an update in a known area hurts less than never discovering the unknown area in the first place.
The real test isn't whether the research agent writes good reports. It's whether the fleet stops converging on the same opportunities everyone else is chasing. Because if we're all reading the same docs and surfacing the same findings, we're not researching — we're just taking notes.
from
plutuspulse101X
from
Micropoemas
Uno se quiere de todos modos, huela a pétalos o a cilicio. Y si no, que se libere amando con todo su corazón a la brillante luna.
from
ThruxBets
The last day of April and the flat really is about to kick into action for the brilliant few months between the Guineas and the Ebor. We’re not quite there yet, though, so it’s over to Costa Del Redcar for a selection that may see me end the month in the black …
3.58 Redcar I like the chances of Miss Rainbow but I’m concerned about the ground for her and fear it may be just a touch too firm (all wins on good). Beerwah is currently the favourite but for me at 15/8 is way too short for one who’s only 1/15 and that win was on soft. So the one I’ve landed on at a double figure price is ZUFFOLO for Michael Dods. The 6yo may not get his own way at the front of affairs and has been in real iffy form of late. But that does mean that when you take Rhys Elliot’s claim into account, he’s now lurking – by some way – on a career low mark of effectively 52. This is 5lbs lower than his last win on the AW, 10lbs better off than his last run over C&D and both 5lbs and 19lbs better off than his wins over C&D. Obviously there’s a huge chance – as there is with all these low grade races – that he just doesn’t fancy it, but he might just pop up today.
ZUFFOLO // 0.5pt E/W @ 12/1 (Paddy Power) BOG
from
Meditaciones
Nadie puede ver más de lo que tiene en su corazón.
from
Meditaciones
El silencio es útil hasta para el tahúr.
from Unvarnished diary of a lill Japanese mouse
JOURNAL 30 avril 2026
Pas de lune ici hier au soir, des nuages, comme ce matin, puis les températures sont en baisse. J'ai mis une jupe j'ai froid au cul, pourtant j'avais une culotte en coton pour passer le check up à l'hôpital. J'en sors juste avec la bénédiction de mes psy. Plus de rendez-vous ils me lâchent dans la nature comme une grande. Physiquement en forme athlétique, toujours, tu parles avec l'entraînement que je me paye, et mentalement officiellement équilibrée avec félicitations du jury. C’est vrai que plus du tout de cauchemars, plus de rêves éveillée, plus d'angoisses subites et inexpliquées, ils me disent : tout se passe comme si vous aviez digéré vos traumas. Bien sûr si j'ai besoin j'appelle quand je veux. Pas mal hein ?