Tuesday, May 26, 2026

Truth Sounds Like Hate to People Who Benefit From the Lie


 

“There’s a difference between talking shit about a person… and talking truth about a shitty person.”

And whew, some people really hate that distinction because accountability feels very personal when the behavior being discussed belongs to them.

See, talking shit is random cruelty. It’s gossip for sport. It’s messy people collecting drama like emotional PokΓ©mon cards.

But speaking the truth about someone’s toxic behavior after you’ve experienced it firsthand? That’s called pattern recognition, baby.

If someone lies, manipulates, disrespects boundaries, plays victim in every situation, and leaves emotional destruction everywhere they go… people eventually notice. That’s not “haters.” That’s Yelp reviews for human behavior.

And somehow the loudest people screaming, “Why are you talking about me?!” are almost always the same people who never once asked:
“Why do I keep doing hurtful things?”

Interesting coincidence.

Also — not every uncomfortable truth is “negativity.”
Sometimes people are finally just refusing to babysit someone else’s bad behavior with silence.

Because protecting your peace occasionally requires saying:
“No, actually… that person WAS shady.”
“And I’m not crazy for noticing it.”

Wild concept, I know.

And let’s be real:
If telling the truth about someone’s actions ruins their reputation, the problem probably isn’t the truth teller. It’s the actions.

So no, sweetheart…
Not everyone exposing toxic behavior is bitter.
Sometimes they’re just done pretending a snake is a support animal.

Stay classy.
Stay observant.
And remember: people committed to being awful usually hate witnesses.

Mean Girl Energy Has an Expiration Date



“Baby girl, don’t be intimidated by grown-ass women with mean girl energy. What is she going to do? Gossip about you to equally insecure women until she dies?”

Listen. Somewhere along the way, some people graduated high school but emotionally decided to stay there forever. Same drama. Same cliques. Same obsession with whispering about people they secretly wish they could be.

And honestly? That’s not intimidating. That’s exhausting.

Confident women don’t spend their free time building group chats dedicated to dissecting another woman’s life like it’s a crime documentary. Secure people don’t need an audience for their bitterness. They’re too busy living.

Mean girl energy in adulthood is basically just unpaid PR work for someone else’s insecurity.

Because think about it:
If someone is constantly talking about you, watching you, judging you, stalking your social media, discussing your choices, criticizing your happiness…
Congratulations. You are the event.

Meanwhile, mature women clap for each other, support each other, and mind their business because they understand another woman shining doesn’t dim their own light. Wild concept, I know.

And let’s be honest — gossip has always been the cheapest form of entertainment for deeply unhappy people. It requires no talent, no growth, no accountability, and absolutely no personality.

So don’t shrink yourself to make bitter people comfortable.
Don’t dim your confidence because someone else peaked emotionally in 2009.
And definitely don’t lose sleep over people whose entire personality is “Did you hear about her?”

Baby girl, let them talk.
People throwing stones at you from the sidelines are still sitting in the sidelines.

You?
Keep glowing.
That alone irritates them enough.

Manifestation, Baby: You’ve Been Doing It This Whole Time


 


Which is both inspiring… and mildly concerning considering some of your past decisions.

“Be confident in yourself. You’ve manifested everything in your life without even being aware of your power. Imagine what you can do now.”

Pause for dramatic effect.

Because honestly?
That quote hits a little different when you realize you somehow manifested:

  • opportunities,
  • survival,
  • glow-ups,
  • lessons,
  • healing,
  • and at least three situationships that should’ve come with a warning label and a therapist referral.

Accidentally.

That’s the wild part.

People out here acting powerless while simultaneously manifesting chaos, toxic exes, success, late-night cravings, emotional breakthroughs, parking spots, and random texts from people who suddenly “miss your energy” the second you stop caring.

Coincidence? Maybe.
Suspicious? Absolutely.

The truth is, most people underestimate themselves because they’re too busy focusing on what hasn’t happened yet instead of realizing how far they’ve already come.

You survived things that once felt impossible.
You adapted.
You rebuilt.
You evolved.

And no, not in the cute inspirational butterfly way.
More like raccoon-in-a-dumpster-at-2AM energy:
confused, slightly feral, but determined to make it work.

That still counts.

Manifestation isn’t always sitting under a full moon whispering affirmations while drinking chlorophyll water and pretending your life is perfectly aligned. Sometimes it’s messy. Sometimes it’s survival mode. Sometimes it’s simply refusing to quit when everything around you says, “Girl… just go lay down.”

But look at you.
Still here.
Still growing.
Still becoming.

That’s power.

And once you become aware of your mindset, your habits, your energy, your boundaries, and the things you continuously feed with your attention? Whew.

Game changer.

Because now you’re not just unconsciously attracting things.
Now you’re choosing.

Choosing peace over drama.
Choosing growth over excuses.
Choosing confidence over shrinking yourself to make insecure people comfortable.

And let’s be honest:
nothing irritates mediocre people more than someone who finally realizes their worth.

So walk boldly into your next chapter.
Manifest intentionally.
Protect your energy.
Trust yourself more.

And maybe… just maybe… stop manifesting emotionally unavailable humans with “potential.”

We’re aiming higher now.

Today’s Mood: Avoiding Shitheads

 


A public service announcement from the tiny girl peeking around the corner like she just heard someone say, “I’m just brutally honest.”

Today’s vibe?
Low battery. High standards. Zero tolerance for nonsense.

You know that feeling when you peek out into the world like a cautious woodland creature because one more exhausting human interaction might send you into witness protection? Yeah. That.

Today is not the day for:

  • fake deep conversations from emotionally unavailable people,
  • energy vampires disguised as “besties,”
  • unsolicited opinions from people whose own lives look like expired yogurt,
  • or adults who think accountability is a personal attack.

No thank you.
Respectfully… and by respectfully, I mean with aggressive side-eye.

The little girl peeking around the wall? That’s all of us trying to figure out if the coast is clear before stepping into another group chat, family function, or comment section full of people arguing with the confidence of someone who read half a headline.

Because sometimes self-care isn’t bubble baths and positive affirmations.
Sometimes self-care is:

  • muting notifications,
  • avoiding drama,
  • protecting your peace,
  • and pretending you didn’t see that message until sometime in 2047.

Growth looks different these days.
It’s no longer:
“I can fix them.”

Now it’s:
“I can absolutely leave them on read.”

And honestly?
That’s healing.

So if you see me quietly peeking around corners today, minding my business like a suspicious raccoon, just know I’m conducting an emotional safety inspection before interacting with the public.

Today's mission:
Avoid chaos.
Avoid weird vibes.
Avoid shitheads.

Stay feral, but hydrated.

Monday, May 25, 2026

 

Welcome to my IDGAF era — where I stopped auditioning for basic human decency like it’s a reality show nobody asked to be on. πŸ’…

Because what do you mean I have to beg for honesty, effort, communication, respect, and consistency? Those are literally the bare minimum, not rare collector’s items.

If love only shows up when it’s convenient for you, keep it.
If respect disappears the second accountability enters the room, keep that too.

I’m no longer overexplaining my worth to people committed to misunderstanding me anyway. Some folks hear your boundaries and immediately translate them into “attitude” because access to you was benefiting them.

That’s not my problem anymore.

And honestly? If somebody has built an entire fictional version of me in their head, I hope they at least gave the character good outfits and a decent soundtrack.

At this point, think whatever you want about me. Then ask yourself:
Did that opinion pay your bills?
Heal your trauma?
Improve your life?
Lower gas prices?
Exactly.

Some people gossip because self-awareness would require too much cardio.

And if you’ve got something to say about me, please say it directly. Don’t wrap disrespect in “I’m just being honest.” That’s not honesty. That’s cowardice wearing lip gloss.

I sleep too good these days to keep correcting people who already decided to misunderstand me before the conversation even started.

Protect your peace.
Match effort accordingly.
And never beg for love that should’ve arrived naturally in the first place.

Discernment: The Skill Nobody Teaches You Until Life Humiliates You Into Learning It

 



Somewhere between adulthood, betrayal, group chats, fake apologies, and hearing “that’s not what happened” for the seventeenth time… you realize something important:

Not everybody telling a story is telling the whole story.

And whew, that realization will age you spiritually faster than unpaid bills and low phone battery combined.

Because some people don’t communicate to resolve things.
They communicate to recruit allies.

There’s a difference.

Welcome to the Olympics of Selective Storytelling

You know the type:

  • They leave out the part where they provoked the situation.
  • Skip key details like they’re speed-running accountability.
  • Tell timelines out of order.
  • Add dramatic tears for cinematic effect.
  • Suddenly become “confused” when consequences arrive.

Meanwhile everybody listening is over there clutching emotional support coffee like:

“OMG you poor thing.”

Whole time the missing context is sitting in the corner like:

“So… are we just not including me today or what?”

And this right here?
This is why discernment matters.

Not paranoia.
Not cynicism.
Not assuming everyone is lying.

Discernment.

The ability to pause long enough to recognize:

“Hmm. Something about this story feels emotionally loud but factually incomplete.”

Discernment Is Basically Emotional Intelligence Wearing Glasses

It’s the skill of observing:

  • patterns,
  • behavior,
  • inconsistencies,
  • accountability,
  • motives,
  • and energy over time.

Because words can perform.
Character eventually slips.

A manipulative person can sound incredibly convincing for a while.
Honestly, some of them deserve acting awards and a podcast sponsorship.

But discernment notices things like:

  • Why does every story end with them being the innocent victim?
  • Why does everyone else become “crazy” eventually?
  • Why do facts keep changing depending on the audience?
  • Why do they want validation more than resolution?

See… emotionally mature people don’t just absorb information.
They assess it.

That’s growth.

The Loudest Person Isn’t Always the Most Honest

Sometimes they’re just the most desperate to control the narrative first.

And society struggles with this because humans naturally respond to emotion faster than logic.

If somebody cries hard enough, posts vague enough quotes online, adds enough “healing era” captions, and throws in one strategically-timed “I’ve been through so much”… people often stop asking questions entirely.

Meanwhile the actual truth is somewhere backstage waiting for its cue.

Because here’s the uncomfortable reality:

Some people weaponize vulnerability.
Some people weaponize half-truths.
Some people weaponize selective honesty.

And selective honesty is still dishonesty.
Just wearing better PR.

But Let’s Be Fair Here…

Not every hurt person is manipulative.
Not every emotional person is lying.
Not every victim is secretly toxic.

Some people genuinely are hurting.
Some people truly were mistreated.

Discernment is not about becoming cold-hearted or suspicious of everyone.

It’s about learning not to hand out permanent judgments based on temporary emotions and one-sided conversations.

That’s wisdom.

Signs You’re Developing Discernment

You start:

  • listening more than reacting,
  • observing more than assuming,
  • noticing patterns instead of isolated incidents,
  • and realizing consistency says more than charisma ever will.

You stop automatically believing:

  • the loudest person,
  • the first storyteller,
  • the most emotional narrator,
  • or the person with the prettiest “protect your peace” Instagram quotes.

Because toxic people love therapy language now too.
Plot twist.

The Hardest Truth?

Sometimes the person being painted as the villain…
is simply the person who finally stopped tolerating manipulation quietly.

And manipulative people hate boundaries because boundaries interrupt control.

Suddenly:

  • your distance becomes “cruel,”
  • your silence becomes “toxic,”
  • your honesty becomes “aggressive,”
  • and your refusal to play along becomes “the problem.”

Funny how accountability feels like betrayal to people who benefited from your lack of it.

Final Thought

Discernment is one of the most valuable life skills you’ll ever develop because it protects you from:

  • manipulation,
  • emotional impulsiveness,
  • false narratives,
  • fake innocence,
  • and making permanent decisions based on incomplete truths.

So the next time someone tries handing you a one-sided story wrapped in emotional urgency and sprinkled with victim seasoning…

Pause.

Observe.

Ask questions.

Because truth does not fear examination.
Manipulation does.

Narrative Olympics: Gold Medalists in Playing the Victim


 


There’s always that one person who deserves an Oscar, a TED Talk, and a restraining order from reality.
You know the type.

They don’t tell the story… they edit it.
Director’s cut.
Deleted scenes.
Selective subtitles.
Conveniently skipping the part where they lit the match before screaming about the fire.

And somehow?
By the end of their emotional performance, they’ve got half the audience clutching pearls, nodding sympathetically, and side-eyeing the wrong person entirely.

Because manipulation rarely shows up wearing a “Hi, I’m toxic” name tag.
It usually arrives dressed as heartbreak, innocence, confusion, and a perfectly rehearsed victim speech.

That’s why emotionally mature people learn something important the hard way:

Never rush to choose sides when you only know one chapter of the story.

Whew. Read that again for the people in the back refreshing group chats like it’s CNN.

Some people are masters at controlling perception.
Not truth. Perception.

They’ll:

  • Tell half the story.
  • Leave out key details.
  • Twist timelines like a pretzel at a baseball game.
  • Weaponize tears.
  • Play innocent.
  • Pretend their reaction happened in a vacuum while ignoring the chaos they personally created five minutes earlier.

And the scary part?
If someone delivers the story with enough emotion, confidence, and dramatic pauses, people often stop asking questions.

Because emotionally charged narratives spread faster than facts.

That’s why discernment matters.

Not cynicism.
Not assuming everyone is lying.
Not dismissing real pain.

Discernment.

There’s a difference.

Because yes — some people truly are victims.
Some people genuinely have been mistreated, manipulated, betrayed, or hurt.

But manipulative people exist too.
And manipulative people don’t usually want resolution.

They want validation without accountability.

That part?
That’s the real mic drop.

See, emotionally immature people rush to pick teams.
Emotionally mature people pause long enough to observe patterns.

They notice:

  • Who consistently creates chaos.
  • Who avoids accountability.
  • Who changes their story depending on the audience.
  • Who provokes reactions and then acts shocked when one finally happens.
  • Who keeps needing a “villain” in every chapter of their life story.

Because eventually patterns stop whispering and start screaming.

And honestly? One of the hardest lessons in adulthood is realizing some people will smile in your face while quietly assassinating your character behind closed doors.

Not because you’re evil.
Not because you’re dangerous.
But because you stopped tolerating manipulation quietly.

That’s usually when the smear campaign starts.

Suddenly:

  • Boundaries become “attitude.”
  • Distance becomes “cruelty.”
  • Speaking up becomes “drama.”
  • Protecting your peace becomes “selfish.”

Funny how accountability feels like abuse to people who benefited from your silence.

And listen… this isn’t permission to become cold, paranoid, or emotionally unavailable.

It’s simply a reminder that wisdom doesn’t react instantly.

Wisdom listens.
Wisdom observes.
Wisdom waits before handing out permanent judgments based on temporary emotions and one-sided conversations.

Because truth has a funny habit of eventually introducing itself.

Character reveals itself eventually.
Intentions reveal themselves eventually.
Patterns reveal themselves eventually.

Always.

So before you jump into someone else’s conflict wearing a cape and carrying pitchforks… pause.

Ask questions.
Observe behavior.
Watch consistency over time.
And remember:

The loudest person in the room is not always the most honest one.
Sometimes they’re just the most terrified of the full story being told.

And sometimes the person being painted as the villain…
is simply the one who finally stopped accepting manipulation with a smile.

Detach: The Art of Letting People Audition Themselves Out of Your Life

 



At some point, you stop begging people to act right and start handing them the freedom to do whatever they want… while you quietly decide if they still deserve access to you. Revolutionary concept, honestly.

Detachment isn’t cold-hearted. It’s emotionally mature with a side of “I’m too tired for this circus.”

Because here’s the thing:
Not every person who enters your life is meant to unpack and stay forever. Some people are just temporary life lessons wrapped in red flags, mixed signals, and unsolicited stress.

And rejection? Painful sometimes, sure. But also? Redirection.
Half the time, the universe is removing people you were holding onto way too tightly because you couldn’t see what was waiting ahead. You called it heartbreak. Meanwhile, life was over there saying, “Ma’am… I’m trying to upgrade you.”

Detachment is realizing:
• You don’t have to attend every argument you’re invited to.
• You don’t need to explain your boundaries 47 different ways for people committed to misunderstanding you.
• Closure is nice, but peace is better.
• Some people will only understand your absence after exhausting your presence.

And maybe everything falling apart right now is actually making room for something healthier, calmer, softer, and more aligned than you can currently imagine.

So let people be who they choose to be.
Believe them.
Observe them.
And then decide if their energy deserves a seat at your table… or just a distant wave from across the parking lot.

Protect your peace.
That’s the assignment.

Protecting Your Peace Like It’s a Full-Time Job

 


There comes a point in adulthood where you realize not every argument deserves your energy, not every invitation deserves your presence, and not every circus deserves your ticket purchase. πŸŽͺ

And honestly? That realization is character development.

The meme says:

“Sometimes, you escape into fantasy to distance yourself from fools, so you never become a part of their circus.”

Which is really just a glamorous way of saying:
“I’m choosing peace before I end up on an episode of Emotional WWE.”

Because let’s be honest — some people are addicted to chaos the way toddlers are addicted to asking questions right when you sit down.

Everything is drama.
Everything is a crisis.
Everything requires an audience, a reaction, and at least three vague Facebook statuses.

Exhausting.

Meanwhile, there are people out here quietly building soft lives, romanticizing simple moments, protecting their nervous systems, drinking iced coffee like it’s therapy, and refusing to participate in nonsense that ages them spiritually.

As they should.

And no, escaping into your own little fantasy world is not always “avoidance.” Sometimes it’s self-preservation with better lighting and a cute outfit.

There is absolutely nothing wrong with protecting your mental health by disconnecting from people whose entire personality is dysfunction wrapped in excuses.

Some folks don’t bring peace.
They bring plot twists.

You ever notice how certain people can turn a normal Tuesday into a six-season Netflix drama?

You say one thing.
They hear another.
Now somehow there’s tension, screenshots, side conversations, and an unnecessary committee meeting about your tone.

At that point, the beach chair and witch hat start looking real therapeutic. πŸ˜‚

And honestly, one of the biggest forms of maturity is learning this:

You do not have to attend every battle you’re invited to.

Read that again for the people currently typing paragraphs in response to people who were committed to misunderstanding them from the beginning.

Not every opinion deserves a rebuttal.
Not every rude comment deserves access to your nervous system.
Not every fool deserves front-row seats to your emotional energy.

Sometimes the strongest thing you can do is quietly back away while they continue performing for an audience that’s equally unhealed.

Gracefully.
Unbothered.
Possibly moisturized.

Now let’s also acknowledge the elite level energy of the woman in this meme because she’s giving:
“Mentally unavailable for nonsense.”
And honestly? Aspirational.

She’s not chasing chaos.
She’s not explaining herself.
She’s not arguing with people committed to confusion.

She’s sipping her drink beside the ocean like:
“Respectfully, I’d rather join a coven than your drama.”

And honestly…
same. πŸ–€

 


Friendly reminder: this is a Facebook page, not a town hall meeting where everyone gets veto power over my posts. πŸ˜‚

Some of y’all act personally attacked every time someone posts an opinion, meme, joke, or truth that wasn’t handcrafted specifically for your comfort level.

Deep breaths, Susan. It’s the internet. You’ll survive. πŸ’…

Also, can we normalize scrolling past things we don’t like instead of auditioning for the role of Unpaid Content Supervisor?

Because honestly…
Not every post is for you.
Not every opinion requires your approval.
And not every sarcastic meme is the collapse of society.

My page is basically a mix of humor, healing, chaos, caffeine, random thoughts, life lessons, and emotional support memes held together by Wi-Fi and audacity. 🀷🏼‍♀️

If you love it — welcome.
If you hate it — the unfollow button has been working beautifully since 2009.

Anyway…
I said what I said.
Now back to living my fabulous little life. πŸ–€✨