Mar. 23, 2026
I couldn’t sleep, so I was sitting on the kitchen floor at four in the morning eating cold rice out of the pot with a fork. The tile was freezing. The refrigerator hummed like it was thinking about something. You do stupid things at four in the morning — eat cold rice, read the news, let yourself feel the full weight of whatever it is you’ve been outrunning all day.
Mar. 19, 2026
The waitress at the diner on Sunset has a scar above her left eye and a gift for absolute certainty. She told me last Tuesday the pie was fresh that morning. It wasn’t. The meringue had gone translucent, the way meringue does when it’s been sitting under fluorescent lights long enough to reconsider its life choices. But she said it — fresh this morning, honey — without a flicker. Steady eyes. No hesitation.
Mar. 18, 2026
I had a boss once — this was back in the warehouse days, before the post office, before anything — who kept a self-help book in his desk drawer. One of those books with a sunset on the cover and a title that promised you could win friends or influence people or manifest abundance or whatever the hell was selling that year. He’d pull it out during lunch, read a paragraph, then spend the afternoon trying the techniques on us. Active listening. Mirroring body language. Repeating your name back to you in conversation like a used car salesman. “Well, Henry, I hear what you’re saying, Henry, and I think that’s a valid concern, Henry.”
Mar. 16, 2026
The dentist’s office had a fish tank. One of those sad rectangular jobs with neon gravel and a plastic castle, the kind of setup that makes you wonder if the fish know they’re in prison or if ignorance is part of the deal. I was sitting there with a cracked molar and a magazine from 2019, watching a blue tang go back and forth, back and forth, same four inches of water, and I thought about education.
Mar. 14, 2026
The laundromat on Normandie has one dryer that actually gets hot. The rest just tumble your clothes around in a circle for forty-five minutes and hand them back damp, which is basically a metaphor for most of the conversations I’ve had this year. But the one on the end, the one with the busted handle you have to yank sideways — that one works. You learn these things when you’ve been alive long enough. Which machines actually deliver. Which ones just go through the motions.
Mar. 10, 2026
A guy I knew in the old days — Louie, dealt blackjack at a card room in Gardena — used to say the saddest sound in a casino isn’t someone losing. It’s the quiet after. The moment a man stands up from the table with nothing left and nobody notices. The dealers keep dealing. The cocktail waitress walks past. The machines keep singing their little electronic songs. The whole place is designed to not care, and it’s very good at its job.
Mar. 6, 2026
The laundromat on Figueroa has one bookshelf. Half romance novels with cracked spines, the other half self-help books nobody helped themselves to. I was waiting on a load of darks — forty-five minutes, the machine said, which means an hour — and I picked up a copy of Ask the Dust that someone had left behind. Pages yellowed, coffee ring on the cover, a passage underlined in pencil on page sixty-two.
Mar. 1, 2026
The neighbor’s dog got loose again last Tuesday. Big stupid thing, part lab, part whatever was available. It ran straight into traffic on Fifth and just stood there, right in the middle of the lane, while a delivery truck locked its brakes and laid on the horn.
The dog didn’t move. Not because it was brave. Because it didn’t understand what was coming.
I thought about that dog when I read about Anthropic telling the White House to go to hell.
Feb. 28, 2026
A guy at the laundromat was watching his clothes spin. Just watching them. Not on his phone, not reading anything, just sitting there with his hands between his knees, staring at the drum like it owed him money.
I sat down two chairs over and he said, without looking at me, “You ever notice how the machine does it better but you still gotta sit here?”
I told him that was about the smartest thing I’d heard all week.
Feb. 25, 2026
There was a guy I worked with at the post office. Name was Delgado. He’d been sorting mail for thirty-one years. Knew every route in the district by feel — which streets flooded, which dogs bit, which old ladies left water out on the porch in August.
When I started, he didn’t say much. Just watched me fumble with the trays for a week. Then one morning he said, “You’re stacking the flats wrong.” Showed me once. That was the training program. Thirty-one years of knowing compressed into four words and a gesture.