Monday, May 25, 2026

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–€✨

Welcome to My Page — Population: Me

 



There’s always that one person on social media who acts personally victimized because you posted an opinion they didn’t like.

Not illegal.
Not harmful.
Not directed at them specifically.

Just… not wrapped in the soft pastel packaging of people-pleasing.

And suddenly here they come:
“You shouldn’t post things like that.”
“That’s too much.”
“You’re gonna offend people.”
“Maybe keep that to yourself.”

Oh no. Anyway. πŸ™ƒ

The meme says:

“When people try to tell me what I can and can’t post on my page…”

And honestly? It perfectly captures the spiritual exhaustion of dealing with self-appointed Facebook Hall Monitors.

Because apparently some people scroll social media like:
“Excuse me, I noticed your content wasn’t specifically curated for my comfort and approval. I’ll need to speak to management immediately.”

Ma’am. Sir. Respectfully.

This is not a hostage situation.

You are free to scroll.
Free to unfollow.
Free to mute.
Free to block.
Free to go outside and reconnect with nature.

The internet is absolutely overflowing with content. If mine irritates you that deeply, I promise there are 14 million videos of golden retrievers wearing pajamas available at your convenience.

Now obviously there’s a difference between being intentionally cruel and simply being authentic. Not every thought belongs online. Emotional maturity still matters.

But some people confuse boundaries with control.

Translation:
“I support free speech… as long as it sounds exactly how I want it to sound.”

That’s not freedom. That’s customer service expectations.

And let’s be honest, some people only love “authenticity” when it’s inspirational quotes, filtered selfies, and vague captions about growth.

The second someone becomes direct, outspoken, sarcastic, opinionated, or unapologetically themselves?
Everybody suddenly needs a wellness break.

Weird.

Also — can we retire the idea that every post must be universally approved by distant cousins, old classmates, coworkers, strangers, and that one person who’s been hate-following since 2017?

Your page is not a corporate press release.

It’s your space.

And honestly, the people constantly trying to police everyone else’s content are usually the same people posting cryptic statuses like:
“Wow. Can’t believe people are showing their true colors lately.”
…with absolutely zero context and 43 comments asking if they’re okay.

Please. πŸ˜‚

At the end of the day, social media gets a lot more peaceful when people remember one simple thing:

Not every post is for you.

Some posts are for healing.
Some are for humor.
Some are for connection.
Some are for venting.
Some are for education.
And some are simply for the beautiful art of saying:
“I said what I said.”

So post the meme.
Share the opinion.
Write the caption.
Laugh loudly.
Be yourself.

And if someone doesn’t like it?

They are more than welcome to exercise the ancient sacred art of… scrolling past. πŸ’…

The Bare Minimum Bucket List

 



Some people want yachts.
Some want private islands.
Some want to become crypto millionaires while drinking celery juice on a balcony in Dubai.

Meanwhile, the rest of us are over here like:

“Honestly? I’d just like inner peace, meaningful connections, a little purpose, decent lighting, and to look disrespectfully good naked.”

And somehow… that still feels ambitious in this economy.

The meme says:

“I just want to be happy, make a difference, love, be loved, learn, create, laugh, stay fresh, and look good naked.”

Which, when you really think about it, is basically the emotionally evolved version of:
“I would like my life to not feel like an unpaid group project.”

Because isn’t that what most people are chasing underneath all the chaos?

Not perfection.
Not constant hustle.
Not becoming a productivity robot with a color-coded planner and adrenal fatigue.

Just a life that feels good to wake up to.

A life where your nervous system isn’t fighting for its life every Tuesday morning.

A life where laughter comes easy, love feels safe, creativity flows naturally, and your biggest stressor is deciding whether you’re overdressed or underdressed for brunch.

Now let’s discuss the “look good naked” part because I refuse to let fake deep people act above it. πŸ˜‚

Listen. Confidence matters.

Not “Instagram fitness influencer who survives exclusively on protein powder and validation” confidence.

Real confidence.

The kind where you stand in front of the mirror and think:
“You know what? I’ve survived a lot… and honestly? I’m still kind of a vibe.”

That matters.

Taking care of yourself isn’t shallow. Wanting to feel attractive isn’t toxic. You are allowed to heal spiritually and moisturize aggressively.

Balance.

And honestly, the older you get, the more you realize happiness is rarely found in giant dramatic moments. It’s hidden in the smaller things:

  • laughing until your stomach hurts
  • creating something meaningful
  • finding people who don’t drain your soul like a phone charger from 2007
  • feeling emotionally safe
  • eating good food without turning it into a moral crisis
  • waking up excited instead of exhausted
  • wearing an outfit that makes you walk differently for absolutely no reason

That’s the good stuff.

The real flex in life isn’t looking successful online while privately falling apart.

It’s building a life you genuinely enjoy living when nobody’s watching.

And maybe that sounds simple.

But in a world obsessed with performance, chaos, comparison, burnout, and proving yourself to strangers on the internet… choosing joy, authenticity, growth, love, and peace is actually pretty rebellious.

So yes.

Be kind.
Make a difference.
Learn things.
Create things.
Laugh loudly.
Love deeply.
Protect your peace.
Drink water.
Stretch occasionally.
And if possible…

Look phenomenal naked.

 


Some people get REAL uncomfortable when the person they hurt finally stops protecting their reputation like it’s a full-time unpaid internship. πŸ™ƒ

Funny how “keep the peace” almost always translates to:
“Please continue suffering quietly so nobody has to feel awkward.”

No thanks.

Telling your story isn’t being dramatic.
It’s called refusing to carry someone else’s lies like emotional carry-on luggage for the rest of your life.

And if the truth makes someone look bad?
That sounds like a them problem, not a you problem.

You don’t owe silence to people who had endless chances to do better and chose not to.
You don’t owe edited versions of your pain to make other people comfortable.
And you definitely don’t owe loyalty to the very behavior that broke you.

Protect your peace, yes.
But don’t confuse peace with pretending nothing happened.

Some of y’all didn’t “change.”
People just finally started comparing notes. πŸ‘€

Speak carefully. Speak honestly. Speak responsibly.
But speak.

Your voice deserves room too. 🀍

Silence Isn’t a Personality Trait — It’s Usually a Survival Skill

 



There’s always that one person clutching their pearls the second someone finally tells the truth.

Suddenly you’re “dramatic.”
You’re “starting problems.”
You’re “living in the past.”

Interesting how accountability always sounds like an attack to people who benefited from your silence.

Let’s talk about it.

Because somewhere along the line, society got really comfortable teaching people to protect reputations instead of protecting people. And honestly? That’s a weird hobby.

The quote says:

“You have every right to talk about what happened to you…”

And that part matters more than people realize.

Because telling your story is not the same thing as running a smear campaign. Speaking about your lived experience is not cruelty. It’s not revenge. It’s not “being negative.” It’s called refusing to carry someone else’s behavior like it’s your lifelong emotional group project.

If someone repeatedly lies, manipulates, betrays, humiliates, gaslights, cheats, or harms people… the problem is not the person who finally says it out loud.

The problem is the behavior.

People love demanding silence from wounded people while offering absolutely zero pressure for harmful people to change. Funny how that works.

And let’s be real for a second:
If the truth ruins someone’s image, the truth is not the villain in this story.

Now, that doesn’t mean every painful moment needs a Facebook live, a 14-slide Instagram exposΓ©, and a soundtrack by Taylor Swift. Healing doesn’t require public performance. Some stories are sacred. Some are private. Some are only meant for therapy, trusted friends, journals, or late-night voice notes you’ll delete later.

But the choice should belong to you.

That’s the point.

Not everyone who speaks up is “seeking attention.” Sometimes they’re seeking oxygen after years of emotional suffocation.

And people who say,
“Well, why didn’t you say something sooner?”
are often the same people who made speaking up feel unsafe in the first place.

Wild coincidence.

Here’s the uncomfortable truth nobody likes talking about: silence often protects the person causing harm more than the person surviving it. Silence keeps everyone comfortable except the one carrying the damage.

So if you finally found your voice after years of shrinking yourself to keep the peace?

Good.

Peace built on your silence was never peace to begin with. It was compliance with better branding.

And no, telling the truth does not make you bitter.

Sometimes it makes you free.

Sometimes it’s the first honest thing you’ve done for yourself in years.

So speak carefully. Speak responsibly. Speak truthfully.

But do not let people guilt you into protecting behaviors that broke you just because your honesty makes them uncomfortable.

Comfort is not more important than truth.

And protecting someone’s image should never cost you your sanity.

Filipino Chicken Adobo Recipe Idea

 


This recipe looks amazing!!  A must try!

Filipino Chicken Adobo 

Ingredients:

* 3 pounds skinless, boneless chicken breasts
* 1/4 cup low sodium soy sauce
* 1 2/3 cups low fat canned coconut milk
* 3/4 cup cider vinegar
* 4 bay leaves
* 1 tsp pepper
* 1 scallion

Directions:

Toss chicken with soy sauce in a large bowl. Refrigerate for at least 30 minutes.

Remove chicken from soy sauce. Transfer chicken to a non stick skillet; set aside soy sauce.

Cook chicken in skillet until browned, 7 to 10 minutes. While chicken is cooking, whisk coconut milk, vinegar, garlic, bay leaves, and pepper into soy sauce.

Add coconut milk mixture to chicken and bring to a boil.

Reduce heat and simmer uncovered for 20 minutes. Flip chicken and continue to cook until done, about 15 minutes. Transfer chicken to plate. Remove bay leaves and skim off any fat. 
Return skillet to medium heat and cook until sauce is thickened. 
Pour sauce over chicken and sprinkle with scallions.
Serve over riced cauliflower.


If It Smells Like Bullshit… It’s Probably Not Dessert

 


There comes a point in life where your peace, sanity, and frontal lobe finally sit you down and say:

“Hey bestie… we need to stop pretending obvious bullshit is a misunderstood personality trait.”

Because listen carefully:
If it smells like bullshit, it’s bullshit.
And sugarcoating it won’t magically turn it into a fucking brownie.

Some people will hand you lies with a smile.
Manipulation with “good intentions.”
Disrespect wrapped in motivational quotes and fake deep captions.

And somehow society expects you to stand there like:

“Well maybe they mean well…”

No.
Maybe they mean exactly what they’re showing you.

At some point, adulthood becomes realizing that confusion is often the biggest red flag of all. Healthy people don’t leave you constantly decoding mixed signals like you’re auditioning for the FBI.

If somebody:

constantly contradicts themselves,
makes excuses instead of changes,
drains your energy,
weaponizes apologies,
or only acts right when they’re scared you’ll leave…

that’s not a misunderstood cupcake.
That’s emotional bullshit with extra frosting.

And let’s talk about sugarcoating for a second.

People LOVE polishing toxic behavior until it sounds inspirational.

They’ll say:

“They’re just passionate.”
→ No, they yell at everyone.
“She’s brutally honest.”
→ No, she enjoys being mean.
“He’s just bad at communication.”
→ No, he communicates perfectly when he wants something.
“They’ve just been through a lot.”
→ So have millions of people who still manage not to act like raccoons in a Walmart parking lot.

Trauma can explain behavior.
It does not excuse treating people like emotional chew toys.

And honestly? Your gut usually knows way before your heart catches up.

That weird feeling?
That constant second-guessing?
That exhaustion after every interaction?

Baby, your intuition is outside waving giant red flags while your optimism is inside baking imaginary brownies out of bullshit crumbs.

Could everyone benefit from grace? Absolutely.

But grace does not mean abandoning common sense.

You are allowed to stop romanticizing potential.
You are allowed to believe patterns.
You are allowed to say:

“Yeah… this smells like bullshit and I’m not hungry.”

Because peace starts when you stop trying to turn toxic ingredients into a five-star dessert.

And some people?
They don’t want accountability.
They want a bakery employee willing to keep decorating their nonsense.

Not today, Betty Crocker.  πŸ€·‍♀️πŸ˜‰

 


Memorial Day hits a little different when the rain slows everything down. ☔πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡Έ

No packed beaches. No perfect BBQ weather. Just a quiet reminder that today is about more than a long weekend.

It’s about gratitude for the heroes who sacrificed everything so we could live freely, laugh loudly, love deeply, and complain dramatically when the forecast ruins our cookout plans. πŸ˜‚πŸŒ­

So today, pause for a moment. Remember the fallen. Hug your people a little tighter. And if you’re currently holding a paper plate under a patio trying to save the hot dogs from the rain… just know you’re participating in a very American tradition. ❤️πŸ€πŸ’™

#MemorialDay #NeverForget #RainyDayVibes #FreedomIsntFree

Saturday, May 23, 2026

Aging Gracefully? I’m Just Trying to Stand Up Without Sound Effects


 

There comes a point in adulthood where your knees start negotiating before you sit down. You don’t just “get up” anymore. Oh no. There’s a process. A strategy. A deep inhale. Maybe a countertop nearby for emotional support.

And whoever said aging is a blessing clearly wasn’t trying to read a restaurant menu in dim lighting while simultaneously pulling a muscle sneezing.

Because let’s be honest: aging is wild.
One minute you’re staying out until 2 a.m. for fun.
The next minute you’re furious someone called after 8:30 because “people should respect bedtime.”

You start making noises for no reason.
You bend down to pick something up and suddenly sound like an old wooden staircase in a haunted house.
You throw your back out sleeping “slightly wrong.”
And your idea of living dangerously becomes drinking coffee after 4 p.m.

But honestly? Aging also comes with a level of wisdom that younger versions of us could never understand. You stop chasing approval. You stop tolerating nonsense just because it’s wrapped in charm. You realize peace is more valuable than drama, comfort matters more than trends, and orthopedic shoes are dangerously close to becoming a personality trait.

And the confidence? Elite.
Because once you survive enough awkward phases, heartbreaks, bad decisions, toxic people, expired lunch meat incidents, and low-rise jeans trends, you realize you can survive pretty much anything.

Sure, the body may reboot like an old laptop every morning, but the mindset gets sharper. You care less about impressing people and more about protecting your energy, your time, and your lower back.

So no, don’t let aging get you down.
Mostly because getting back up now requires a game plan, two attempts, and possibly making direct eye contact with a nearby chair for support.

At this point, if I fall, everybody better mind their business while I decide whether it’s worth the effort to stand back up or if this floor is my new home now. πŸ’€