Saturday, December 13, 2025

🎄 Responsible… But Make It Seasonal

 



I fully support being a responsible adult. Truly.
Pay the bills, show up on time, don’t microwave metal—growth looks good on us.

But every single day?
No days off? No pause button? No “I’ll deal with that after the holidays” grace period?

Sometimes the most responsible thing you can do is sit back, grab the remote, stare at the tree, and let the world survive without your productivity for a few hours.
Because burnout isn’t a badge of honor, and exhaustion isn’t a personality trait.

So yes, be grown. Be accountable. Be mature.
But also remember: even the Grinch knows that rest, joy, and a little not-giving-a-damn are part of the balance.

Consider this your official permission slip to relax.
Being responsible every day is… a little excessive. 🎄😏

🎄 Booked, Busy, and Mindin’ My Own Chaos

 



When you know what you do best is make trouble…
and suddenly your schedule clears itself.

Not the destructive kind—relax.
The stir the pot with style, shake the table just enough, expose the nonsense and disappear kind.

Because some of us aren’t here to cause problems…
we’re here to highlight them. Loudly. Accidentally. With great timing.

So if you see me on my way with that Grinch energy, minding my business but somehow finding chaos—
just know: I didn’t wake up choosing violence.

I woke up choosing honesty, humor, and a little festive mischief.
And honestly? Someone had to do it. 😌🎄

🖤 Leave That Shit in 2025

 


*

Friendly reminder from the toilet philosopher 🐿️📱
Poop before midnight on December 31st.

Because nobody—nobody—needs to be carrying the same sh*t into 2026.
Not the drama.
Not the excuses.
Not the people who “haven’t changed but swear they will.”

This is a full spiritual cleanse.
Flush the bad habits.
Release the emotional constipation.
Unfollow, let go, and stop explaining yourself to people who already decided not to understand you.

New year, lighter load, better boundaries.
If it doesn’t serve you, support you, or respect you—
send it down the pipes with confidence. 🚽😌

Sometimes “Nice” Doesn’t Work — So Boundaries Get Louder

 



Let’s clear something up real quick: being direct is not the same as being rude.
Some people don’t understand gentle hints, polite reminders, or calm explanations. They understand energy shifts.

You can say it sweetly ten times, and they’ll still test you an eleventh.
So eventually, your tone changes. Not because you’re mean — but because you’re done.

Here’s the part people love to judge:
When you finally stop tolerating nonsense, they call you “rude,” “cold,” or “dramatic.”
Funny how your boundaries become a problem only when they can’t cross them anymore.

Sometimes you have to be a little savage to make it clear:
I’m not arguing.
I’m not explaining myself again.
And I’m definitely not available for your nonsense.

Respect isn’t taught by being endlessly polite — it’s taught when access gets limited.
And if being firm protects your peace? Then call it rude.
I’ll call it self-respect with a backbone.

Because the truth is…
People who benefit from your silence will always hate your boundaries. 😉

Healthy Chicken Pad Thai Recipe Idea

 


Healthy Chicken Pad Thai!


Ingredients:

1 1/2 cups (4.1 oz) daikon radish, peeled (2 greens)

1 1/2 cups (7.89 oz) Sliced red pepper (3 greens)

4 cups (15.92 oz) spiraled zucchini (8 greens)

2 cups (7.32 oz) bean sprouts (4 greens)

1/2 cup (1.76 oz) green onions, finely sliced (white and green parts) (1 green)

36 ounces cooked chicken breast (6 leaners)

1 cup cilantro leaves, chopped (1 condiment)

2 tablespoons sesame seeds, preferably black (2 healthy fats)


Peanut sauce:

6 tbsp PB2 (made by Bell Plantation) (3 condiments)

6 tbsp lime juice (9 condiments)

2 tablespoons low sodium tamari or other soy sauce (2 condiments)

1 packet Stevia or Splenda (1 condiment)

2 teaspoons grated fresh ginger (1 condiment)

1/2 tsp red pepper flakes (1 condiment)

About 3 tablespoons water, to thin (if needed)


Directions:


Using a spiralizer or a peeler, shred the radish and zucchini into “noodles”. Toss together the radish, zucchini, sliced green onion and bean sprouts and set aside in a large bowl.

Next mix all the peanut sauce ingredients until smooth and creamy. Toss the sauce with the “noodles” and top with warm cooked chicken, chopped cilantro, sesame seeds and a wedge of lime.


Makes 6 servings



I Officially Clocked Out of the Bullshit

 


One day I woke up and thought, “You know what? I want to live an unbullshitified life.”
No warning. No announcement. Just a quiet resignation from the Department of Nonsense.

That means:

  • If it feels weird, I believe it.

  • If your words don’t match your actions, I’m not doing the math anymore.

  • If I have to beg, chase, decode, or spiritually interpret your behavior—I’m out.

An unbullshitified life is when you stop arguing with red flags like they’re opinions. When you stop confusing potential with progress. When you realize peace is way hotter than chaos, and clarity is sexier than chemistry.

Slightly savage truth:
If someone keeps “almost” showing up for you, they are very intentionally not showing up for you. And no, it’s not your job to teach grown adults how to act right.

Living unbullshitified doesn’t make you cold.
It makes you allergic to nonsense.

You still love deeply—you just don’t suffer stupidly anymore.

So here’s to less explaining, less tolerating, and less “maybe it’ll change.”
More peace. More laughs. More standards.
And absolutely zero bullshit.

Cheers to choosing yourself—and blocking accordingly. 🥂😌

Hot Mess, Loud Heart, Zero Regrets

 


I’m learning as I go—and yes, most days I’m a certified hot mess.
My tongue is passionate and bold, my heart runs ahead of my brain, and thinking things all the way through has never been my strongest character trait. I feel first. I leap second. I reflect… eventually.

Do I say too much sometimes? Absolutely.
Do I love loudly, move quickly, and trust my instincts a little too hard? Guilty.
But here’s the thing—I’m trying. And growth doesn’t always look polished. Sometimes it looks like trial, error, and a little emotional whiplash.

Let’s be honest (and a tad savage):
The world is full of perfectly put-together people who never take a risk, never speak up, never love hard, and never leave the comfort zone. They call it “being careful.” I call it playing small in a pretty outfit.

I’d rather be a chaotic mess of burning passion than a well-behaved coward who never says what they feel, never goes for what they want, and never dares to be real.

Messy people feel deeply.
Bold people live honestly.
Passionate people might stumble—but at least they’re moving.

So if I’m a little loud, a little reckless, and a little unfinished—good. I’m not here to be perfect. I’m here to be alive, evolving, and unapologetically me.

Hot mess? Maybe.
Heart on fire? Always. 🔥
And I wouldn’t trade that for tidy fear any day.

Raised by Legends, Not Easily Shaken

 


You don’t scare me, darling. I come from a long line of lunatics.”

And honestly? Same.

When you’re raised by strong, loud, emotional, resilient, slightly unhinged women, you don’t rattle easy. We were taught early how to survive chaos, laugh through madness, and stand our ground without asking permission. Drama doesn’t intimidate us—it just tells us who we’re dealing with.

Coming from a long line of lunatics doesn’t mean unstable. It means seasoned. It means we’ve seen enough, felt enough, and healed enough to recognize nonsense the moment it shows up wearing confidence. We don’t flinch at raised voices, big egos, or empty threats. We’ve survived worse… usually at family dinners.

Here’s the helpful truth:
When you know where you come from, you stop being afraid of who stands in front of you. You trust your instincts. You hold your boundaries. You don’t mistake intensity for power or noise for strength.

A little savage (just a pinch):
If you think your attitude is going to scare a woman raised by warriors with wild hearts and sharper tongues—you’re adorable.

We’re not reckless—we’re resilient.
Not dramatic—we’re deep.
Not intimidating—we’re unbothered.

So no, darling, you don’t scare me.
I was built in chaos, raised by fire, and taught to smile through storms.

And women like that?
We don’t get scared.
We get ready. 🔥

Six Sentences That’ll Upgrade Your Mindset (and Save Your Peace)

 


Every once in a while, you don’t need a full life overhaul—you just need a few sentences that hit hard enough to rearrange the furniture in your mind. These are those sentences. Simple. Direct. Slightly uncomfortable. Life-changing if you actually apply them.

1. Stop telling people everything.
Not everyone needs a front-row seat to your life. Some people don’t care—and a few are quietly rooting for your downfall. Privacy isn’t secrecy; it’s protection. Move in silence. Let results do the talking.

2. Choose your friends wisely.
Who you sit with eventually shapes how you think, move, and dream. The fastest way to level up isn’t motivation—it’s proximity. Surround yourself with people who challenge you, not drain you.

3. Expect nothing. Appreciate everything.
Expectations breed disappointment. Gratitude builds peace. When you learn to appreciate the small wins, the quiet moments, and the progress no one sees, life feels lighter—and joy becomes automatic.

4. Do your best and trust the process.
There’s no shortcut around consistency. Put in the work even when no one’s clapping. Funny thing about life—the harder you work, the luckier you get.

5. Control yourself, not others.
Trying to control people is exhausting and ineffective. Mastering yourself? That’s real power. Discipline, boundaries, and self-awareness will take you further than manipulation ever could.

6. Learn to react less.
Not every comment deserves a response. Not every situation deserves your energy. When you control your reactions, you take away everyone else’s power over you. Calm is a flex.

Here’s the slightly savage truth:
Peace isn’t found by changing the world—it’s built by changing how you move in it.

Apply these six sentences daily, and watch your mindset sharpen, your circle shift, and your life get a whole lot quieter… in the best way.

Sarcasm Is a Side Effect, Not a Personality Flaw

 


“If you don’t want a sarcastic answer, don’t ask a stupid question.”

And honestly? That’s not attitude—that’s efficiency.

Some of us come with colorful hair, quick wit, and a built-in lie detector for nonsense. We’re not mean. We’re just allergic to questions that could’ve been answered with common sense, Google, or five seconds of critical thinking.

Here’s the helpful part:
Sarcasm isn’t about being rude—it’s about setting boundaries with humor. It’s the polite cousin of “you already know better.” When used right, it keeps conversations honest, light, and free of unnecessary chaos.

Now, a tiny bit savage (because the quote asked for it):
If you keep asking questions you don’t actually want the answer to… don’t be shocked when the response comes with seasoning.

Smart people appreciate sarcasm because it saves time. Secure people laugh it off. Only the chronically offended take it personally.

And let’s be real—women who are bold, expressive, and a little unconventional don’t owe the world softness on demand. We can be kind and clever. Warm and witty. Respectful and done with foolishness.

So if you want sweetness, ask with sense.
If you want honesty, ask boldly.
And if you ask something ridiculous… well…

Don’t blame the sarcasm.
Blame the question. 😌