Wednesday, May 20, 2026

 


Apparently TLC did not account for 2026 gas prices when they wrote “No Scrubs.” πŸ˜‚⛽

Because today?
A man hanging from the passenger side of his best friend’s ride is not a scrub… he’s financially aware, emotionally intelligent, environmentally conscious, and one tank of gas away from needing a co-signer.

Honestly, if somebody offers to drive now, you don’t insult them… you salute them for their sacrifice. πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡ΈπŸ˜­

At this point, carpooling isn’t embarrassing. It’s wealth management. And if your friend picks you up? You better walk outside READY. No second trips back in the house. Gas is too expensive for all that character development. πŸ˜‚

I Made a Huge To-Do List for Today…


 

I Just Can’t Figure Out Who’s Going to Do It.

You ever wake up motivated for approximately seven minutes… create a color-coded to-do list that looks like a Fortune 500 quarterly strategy plan… and then immediately need a snack and emotional support?

Same.

Somewhere between “be productive” and “why is my brain buffering,” the day takes a sharp left turn. Suddenly the list is staring at you like an unpaid intern waiting for instructions, and you’re staring back like:

“Wow. Whoever has to do all this is going THROUGH it.”

The confidence we have while writing the list is honestly unmatched.
9:00 AM Me:

  • Clean the house
  • Answer emails
  • Work out
  • Meal prep
  • Fix my entire life
  • Become mentally stable
  • Drink more water
  • Heal childhood trauma
  • Maybe start a business

2:17 PM Me:

  • Rotating slowly like a rotisserie chicken while scrolling TikTok
  • Wondering if a nap counts as personal growth
  • Reheating coffee for the fourth time because apparently that’s my cardio

And honestly? The audacity of past-me assigning all these tasks to future-me is getting disrespectful.

Because why did I write this list like I’m a team of twelve highly trained professionals with unlimited energy and no emotional damage?

Ma’am. We got distracted by a bird outside and spent twenty minutes googling “can squirrels recognize human faces.” Let’s be serious.

The real problem isn’t laziness. It’s that our brains love creating unrealistic expectations while conveniently forgetting:

  • we are human,
  • life is exhausting,
  • and sometimes replying “sounds good!” to a text deserves a medal.

Also, can we discuss how adding something easy to the list just so we can cross it off immediately is basically emotional support behavior?

✔ Wake up
✔ Open laptop
✔ Think about being productive

Progress. Excellence. Leadership.

And somehow the to-do list keeps growing. You finish one thing and three more appear like a toxic group project nobody asked for. Bills. Laundry. Emails. Appointments. Trying not to lose your mind every time someone says, “We should hop on a quick call.”

No. We should not.

But here’s the helpful part hidden beneath the sarcasm and monkey-level avoidance tactics:

Your worth is not measured by how much you accomplish in one day.

You do not need to earn rest by running yourself into the ground first.

And contrary to what hustle culture screams from its iced coffee-fueled rooftop, being overwhelmed does not mean you’re failing. It usually means you’re trying to carry too much at once while pretending you’re fine because “it’s okay, I got it.”

Meanwhile your nervous system is filing complaints with management.

So maybe today’s goal doesn’t need to be “conquer the entire universe before dinner.”

Maybe today’s win is:

  • doing ONE important thing,
  • drinking actual water,
  • answering the email you’ve avoided since Tuesday,
  • and not dramatically disappearing into the woods.

That counts.

And if all else fails, just stare at your to-do list long enough to establish dominance.

The list probably isn’t getting done today anyway.
But spiritually?
You and that monkey are doing amazing.

A Healed Nervous System Looks Really Different Than People Think




People think healing means becoming unbothered.
Like suddenly you float through life in beige linen pants, never triggered, never emotional, never wanting to throw your phone across the room after somebody says “k.”

Meanwhile real healing is much less aesthetic and way more powerful.

A healed nervous system stops treating every rejection like a personal extinction event.

You stop hearing:
“We’re not a match”
…and translating it into:
“You are fundamentally unlovable and should probably move into the woods now.”

You stop collapsing every time someone misunderstands you.

Because healed people realize something important:
being misunderstood is uncomfortable… but it is NOT fatal.

And honestly? Some people are committed to misunderstanding you no matter how clearly, kindly, calmly, or thoughtfully you explain yourself.

You could create a PowerPoint presentation with charts, bullet points, witness testimony, and a live demonstration… and they’d still walk away determined to make you the villain in the story they already wrote about you.

At some point healing sounds like:
“Okay. Have fun with that.”

Because you stop abandoning yourself just to keep the peace.

You stop overexplaining.
Over-apologizing.
Overperforming.
Over-shrinking.

You stop twisting yourself into an emotional pretzel trying to make everybody comfortable while your own nervous system is in the corner filing HR complaints.

That’s not peace.
That’s self-betrayal with good manners.

And let’s be honest… constantly chasing validation from people who already decided not to understand you is one of the most exhausting side quests imaginable.

Healing is realizing:
closure is nice, but inner stability is better.

It’s becoming grounded enough that someone else’s opinion no longer controls your entire emotional climate.

Does criticism still sting sometimes? Sure.
Do disappointments still hurt? Absolutely.

But healed people don’t immediately spiral into:

  • “I’m too much.”
  • “Nobody likes me.”
  • “I should disappear forever.”
  • “Maybe I should apologize for having human emotions.”

You start responding instead of reacting.

You pause before abandoning yourself.
You breathe before panicking.
You stop handing other people the remote control to your self-worth.

And that right there?
That’s real healing.

Not becoming cold.
Not becoming emotionless.
Not pretending nothing affects you.

Just finally becoming safe enough within yourself that every uncomfortable moment no longer feels like the end of your world.

Honestly… peace looks less like perfection and more like:
“Your misunderstanding of me is no longer my emergency.”

Gas Prices Got So High… Even TLC Had to Update the Definition of a Scrub


 


Somewhere between eggs costing luxury-car prices and gas stations requiring a small loan application at the pump, society has officially entered a new era.

And in this economy?

A man hanging from the passenger side of his best friend’s ride is no longer a scrub.
He is a financially responsible king maximizing fuel efficiency and reducing wear and tear on his own vehicle.

Honestly, we owe that man an apology.

Because back in the day, if you didn’t have your own ride, people judged you.
Now? If somebody volunteers to drive, the entire friend group looks at them like they just performed a public service.

“Wait… you drove HERE? On purpose? In THIS economy? Heroic.”

Gas prices have turned basic transportation into a team sport. Nobody’s flexing independence anymore. We’re coordinating routes like a military operation.

“Can you grab me on the way?”
“Actually yes, because if I make one more unnecessary left turn, I may have to refinance my Corolla.”

At this point, carpooling isn’t embarrassing. It’s elite financial strategy.
The passenger princesses and side-seat survivors are thriving while the rest of us are out here watching the gas pump climb faster than our credit scores.

And let’s really talk about the emotional damage of pumping gas now.

You pull up confident.
You leave humbled.

You don’t even fill the tank anymore. You just give the cashier a number and let destiny decide.

“Twenty on pump 6.”
Translation: “May the odds be ever in my favor.”

Meanwhile, the person hanging out the passenger window? Relaxed. Moisturized. Unbothered. Financially stable.
No car payment stress. No gas bill. Just vibes and upper body strength.

Frankly, society judged him too quickly.

The real scrub in 2026 is the friend who says:
“I don’t mind driving,”
and then expects NO gas money.

Sir. Be serious.

These streets are expensive.

So next time you see somebody riding shotgun in their best friend’s vehicle, don’t laugh. Don’t judge. Don’t quote TLC too fast.

That’s not a scrub anymore.
That’s a man adapting to inflation with courage, humility, and a full understanding of today’s economic climate.

And honestly?
We should all aspire to that level of financial awareness.

Well… That Didn’t Go as Planned

 




A memoir written entirely by missed exits, emotional support iced coffee, and “learning experiences.”

You ever look back on your life and realize it’s basically just one long chain of:
“Okay, THIS time I’ve got it figured out…”
followed immediately by chaos, confusion, and a completely unnecessary character-building exercise?

Because honestly?
Some people have vision boards.
Some of us have survival stories that started with, “It seemed like a good idea at the time.”

The older I get, the more I realize adulthood is just aggressively improvising while pretending you meant to do that the whole time.

You planned a peaceful weekend.
Life sent:

  • a flat tire,
  • an emotional breakdown,
  • three ignored texts suddenly answered at once,
  • and a random urge to reorganize your entire kitchen at 11:47 PM.

Cool. Love that for us.

And can we talk about how exhausting it is being optimistic?
Like somehow we STILL wake up every morning thinking:
“Maybe today will be calm.”

Meanwhile life is in the corner like:
“LOL. Anyway…”

At this point, my coping mechanism is humor, snacks, and lowering expectations just enough to stay emotionally hydrated.

Because here’s the thing nobody tells you:
Almost nobody’s life went according to plan.

The people who look like they have it all together?
Half of them are one inconvenience away from staring at a wall in silence for 45 minutes.

The rest of us are just out here adapting.
Badly. But adapting.

And honestly?
There’s something weirdly freeing about admitting it.

Not every failed plan means you failed.
Sometimes it just means life hit the shuffle button while you were trying to color-code your future.

Maybe the relationship ending wasn’t the tragedy.
Maybe staying would’ve been.

Maybe the job falling apart redirected you somewhere healthier.
Maybe the delay saved you from forcing something that was never aligned to begin with.

Or maybe…
it was just a complete dumpster fire with no deeper meaning whatsoever.

That’s also possible.

Not everything is a spiritual lesson, Susan.
Sometimes your GPS reroutes because you’re emotionally unstable and missed the exit.

But if we’re being fair, some of the best parts of life come from the unplanned moments:

  • the people you never expected to meet,
  • the opportunities that showed up disguised as inconvenience,
  • the strength you discovered after plans collapsed,
  • and the ability to laugh at things that once would’ve destroyed you.

Growth is realizing:
“I survived things I thought would break me… and now I joke about them with iced coffee in hand.”

That’s evolution, baby.

So if your life currently feels like a flaming beach umbrella blowing into the ocean while you stand there with wild hair and thousand-yard stare energy…

Congratulations.
You’re participating in the human experience.

And honestly?
“Well, that didn’t go as planned” might actually be the unofficial slogan of adulthood.

Right next to:

  • “I need to lie down.”
  • “Why is this sticky?”
  • and “I literally just paid bills yesterday.”

My Therapist Deserves Hazard Pay


 There are two kinds of people in this world:

People who think before they speak…

…and people like us, who think “absolutely not” before realizing the joke we were about to say would’ve earned us a long pause, a clipboard note, and a concerned “How long have you felt this way?”

That tiny pause before speaking?
That’s not maturity.
That’s quality control.

Because some of us were blessed with a sense of humor so wildly unhinged that it has to pass through several internal security checkpoints before being released into the public. Not every audience is prepared for comedy that walks the fine line between “hilarious” and “should we unpack that?”

And honestly, the raccoon energy fits perfectly.

Sleep deprived.
Slightly feral.
Emotionally held together with caffeine, sarcasm, and one very specific playlist.
Digging through life’s trash pile looking for one tiny serotonin snack.

The truth is, dark humor is basically emotional camouflage. Some people journal. Some people meditate. Some of us make jokes so outrageous that our friends laugh first and then stare at us like, “You good?”

No. But I’m funny.

And that should count for something.

There’s also a special kind of exhaustion that comes from constantly translating your real thoughts into socially acceptable versions. Because apparently society frowns upon responding to minor inconveniences with comments dramatic enough to concern nearby civilians.

So instead, we pause.

We smile politely.

We say things like:
“Wow, that’s unfortunate.”

When what we wanted to say would’ve made a therapist blink twice and quietly reach for a pen.

But honestly? Humor like this usually comes from people who’ve survived some stuff. People who learned to laugh because crying in public is apparently “concerning behavior.” People who can turn chaos into comedy faster than a raccoon can knock over a trash can at 2 a.m.

So if you’re the type who has to mentally review every joke before releasing it into the wild…

Congratulations.

You are not rude.
You are not inappropriate.
You are simply emotionally spicy with excellent comedic timing.

And somewhere out there, a therapist is taking a deep breath before your next session.

Apparently Saying “That Felt Wrong” Is Now Stirring the Pot

 






One thing society absolutely hates is a person who notices something is off… and then has the audacity to say it out loud.

Because somehow, the moment you stop quietly tolerating disrespect, manipulation, shady behavior, or emotional nonsense, people suddenly act like you’re the chaos.

Interesting.

You could spend six months being patient, understanding, calm, and giving people the benefit of the doubt like it’s a Costco free sample…

But the SECOND you say:
“Yeah, no, that didn’t sit right with me,”

suddenly you’re “dramatic,” “difficult,” “starting problems,” or my personal favorite:
“stirring the pot.”

No babe.
The pot was already boiling.
You just stopped pretending the smoke smelled like lavender.

There’s a huge difference between causing conflict and refusing to choke down behavior that insults your peace, intelligence, or boundaries. Some people are just deeply uncomfortable when accountability enters the room wearing heels and direct eye contact.

And let’s be honest — certain folks build entire personalities around other people staying quiet. So when you finally speak up, it ruins the illusion they had going. Now suddenly you’re “negative” because you noticed the math wasn’t mathing.

That’s not stirring the pot.

That’s reading the ingredients list before taking another bite.

And people who benefit from confusion absolutely cannot stand clarity. The second you ask questions, set boundaries, or stop accepting the watered-down version of respect they were offering, they act personally attacked.

Meanwhile you’re over here just trying not to emotionally dine on expired nonsense.

The truth is, healthy people don’t panic when you communicate. Healthy people don’t need silence to maintain control. Healthy people can handle someone saying:
“Hey, that hurt.”
“That felt manipulative.”
“That didn’t seem honest.”
“This dynamic isn’t working for me.”

But toxic people?
Oh, they treat basic accountability like you’ve launched a full-scale attack on the kingdom.

And the wild part is, people will often tolerate dysfunction for YEARS as long as everyone agrees to stay quiet about it. The person who points it out becomes “the problem” simply because denial was making everyone else more comfortable.

But comfort and truth are not always roommates.

So no — don’t let anybody convince you that having standards, boundaries, discernment, or a functioning internal alarm system makes you “too much.”

You didn’t stir the pot.

You just refused to keep eating something that tasted wrong while everyone else sat there pretending it was gourmet.



 

Tuesday, May 19, 2026

Let’s Talk About Healing Nobody Claps For

 



Everybody says they want you to heal.

Until your healing changes how accessible you are.

Until you stop answering every text immediately.
Until you stop apologizing for things that weren’t your fault.
Until you stop managing the moods, expectations, and emotional chaos of everyone around you like it’s your full-time job.

People love the idea of your healing.

The glowing-after photo.
The peaceful version.
The “look how far you’ve come” version.

But the actual process of healing?
Oh, that part makes people deeply uncomfortable.

Because real healing is messy.

It’s crying over things you thought you were “over.”
It’s realizing some of your personality traits were actually trauma responses wearing a cute outfit.
It’s having random memories hit you in the middle of folding laundry like your brain suddenly reopened a cold case investigation.

You’re standing there holding a towel like:
“Wait a damn minute… that wasn’t normal.”

And suddenly everything starts connecting.

The people-pleasing.
The hyper-independence.
The inability to rest without guilt.
The constant need to keep the peace.
The habit of shrinking yourself to make everyone else comfortable.

You thought you were “easygoing.”
Turns out you were surviving.

You thought you were mature because you could handle everyone’s emotions.
No.
You were emotionally exhausted and over-trained in self-abandonment.

That realization changes people.

And not everybody benefits from the changed version.

Because healing comes with boundaries.
And boundaries are offensive to people who were benefiting from your lack of them.

The old version of you said yes when they wanted to say no.
The old version of you tolerated things that should’ve never required tolerance.
The old version of you confused being needed with being loved.

So when you start protecting your peace?
People notice.

Suddenly you’re “different.”
“Hard to read.”
“Too distant.”
“Cold.”

Interesting.

Because nobody called you cold when you were overextending yourself into emotional bankruptcy trying to save everybody else.

Funny how that works.

And let’s talk about the part nobody prepares you for:
Healing includes grief.

Not just grieving people.
Grieving versions of yourself.

The version that accepted crumbs because they didn’t know they deserved more.
The version that normalized chaos.
The version that thought love had to be earned through sacrifice.

Sometimes healing means letting that version die.

And yes, that sounds dramatic.
But so is realizing you spent years setting yourself on fire just to keep relationships warm.

The truth is:
Not everyone will celebrate your growth.

Some people only liked the version of you that had no boundaries, low standards, and unlimited emotional availability.

Your healing exposes unhealthy dynamics.
Your boundaries reveal entitlement.
Your growth disrupts systems that once benefited from your silence.

And honestly?
Good.

Because your healing was never supposed to keep everyone comfortable.
It was supposed to set you free.

So if you’ve been feeling lonely during your growth season…
If you’ve been questioning yourself because certain people started acting different once you started valuing yourself differently…

That doesn’t automatically mean you’re doing something wrong.

Sometimes it just means the version of you they had access to no longer exists.

And that was the whole point.

Friday, May 15, 2026

 

“Calm down.”
— Said exclusively by the person who just lit the match, poured the gasoline, and stood there shocked the fire started. πŸ˜­πŸ˜‚

Like sir/ma’am… you don’t get to audition for WWE, poke the bear repeatedly, then suddenly become a yoga instructor when I react.

The audacity be out here doing CrossFit. 🀦‍♀️πŸ’€

And my personal favorite?
They push…
and push…
and PUSH…

Then the second you finally respond:
“Wow… someone’s angry.”

No Karen, someone’s accurate. 😌☕

#CalmDownTheySay
#StartedItThough
#ProfessionalButtonPushers
#DontGaslightAndActConfused
#IWasPeacefulBeforeYouArrived