Wednesday, July 15, 2026

Clocks Show Time… But Time Reveals People ⏰

 


We spend so much of our lives watching the clock.

Waiting for the weekend.
Counting down to vacation.
Watching the minutes crawl during a difficult season.
Wishing certain moments would pass faster.

But somewhere along the way, we forget something important…

Time isn’t just something we measure. Time is something that reveals.

A clock can tell you what hour it is, but time has a way of showing you much more.

It shows you who checks in when life gets hard.
Who celebrates your wins without secretly comparing them.
Who only reaches out when they need something.
Who says they care… and who actually shows it.

Because words are easy.

Actions are where the truth lives.

Someone can tell you they’ll always be there, but time will show you if they mean it. Someone can promise they’ve changed, but time will reveal whether it was growth or just a temporary performance.

And sometimes… that truth is uncomfortable.

Because we don’t always want the answer time gives us.

Sometimes we want to keep seeing the version of someone we hoped they would become instead of accepting the version they consistently show us.

We hold onto memories. We hold onto history. We hold onto potential.

But potential is not the same thing as reality.

Time has a way of gently (and sometimes not so gently 😂) reminding us that we cannot build a healthy relationship with someone’s “maybe someday.”

We have to pay attention to who they are today.

The beautiful thing about time, though, is that it doesn’t only reveal the people around us.

It reveals us.

It shows us how much we’ve grown.
What we no longer tolerate.
What we once thought we needed but now realize we’ve outgrown.
The boundaries we finally learned to set.

The older we get, the more we realize peace is expensive — and we stop giving it away so easily.

Some people will walk into your life and become lifelong blessings.

Some will teach you lessons you never wanted to learn.

Some will show you exactly what you don’t want again.

And while some endings hurt, sometimes time eventually shows you that what you thought was a loss was actually protection.

Funny how that works, isn’t it?

The same situation you once cried over may become the thing you’re most grateful you survived.

So yes…

Clocks show time.

But time shows people.

It reveals character.
It reveals intentions.
It reveals consistency.
It reveals what is real and what was only temporary.

Pay attention to what time is showing you.

Because sometimes the biggest answers in life aren’t found by looking at the clock…

They’re found by watching what happens over time. ⏰❤️

Stop Competing With Someone Else's Highlight Reel

 


"Before you fake your lifestyle on Facebook, at least block the people who know you in person." 😅

Okay... it's a meme. Laugh a little.

But underneath the sarcasm is a real reminder.

Social media has made it incredibly easy to compare your real life to someone else's carefully edited version of reality.

Some people are posting luxury while stressing over bills.
Some are posting "relationship goals" while barely speaking at home.
Others are posting success they haven't actually achieved yet.

And you know what?

That's exhausting.

The truth is, you don't have to impress strangers—or even people you know—with a life that isn't yours.

Real success doesn't need filters.
Real happiness doesn't require constant announcements.
Real peace is sleeping well at night because your online life matches your real life.

Instead of chasing appearances, chase authenticity.

Celebrate the small wins.
Be proud of your progress.
Share the victories if you want—but don't feel pressured to manufacture them.

The people worth having in your life will appreciate the real you far more than a version created for likes.

And remember...

The richest people aren't always the ones with the fanciest photos.
The happiest couples aren't always the ones posting every week.
The most successful people are usually too busy building their lives to constantly prove they're living one.

Be real.

It's a whole lot easier than trying to remember the story you posted yesterday. 😉

Mean Is Not a Personality Trait

 


"I can't stand mean people. Like, go to therapy, hug a tree, do something, solve your problems." 😂🌳

Seriously though...

Being rude isn't a flex.
Being hateful isn't a personality.
And making everyone around you miserable doesn't make you "real"—it just makes people avoid you.

Life is hard. We all have bad days. We've all been hurt, disappointed, stressed, and overwhelmed.

You know what most decent people don't do?

Turn around and use strangers as emotional punching bags.

If your first response to everything is anger, sarcasm, insults, gossip, or trying to tear someone else down... it might be time for a little self-reflection instead of another Facebook argument.

Go to therapy.
Take a walk.
Pet a dog.
Hug a tree.
Drink some water.
Touch some grass.
Journal.
Meditate.
Learn to communicate.
Do something.

Because healing your wounds is your responsibility—not everyone else's.

The strongest people I know aren't the loudest or the meanest.
They're the ones who choose kindness even when life gives them every reason not to.

And if being kind costs you nothing...
Why are so many people acting like it's outrageously expensive?

Choose grace.
Choose growth.
And if all else fails... at least leave innocent people out of your bad mood. 😏

#KindnessWins #ChooseBetter #HealDontHurt #PositiveVibes #GrowthMindset #BeTheReasonSomeoneSmiles #LifeLessons #SarcasmWithTruth

Tuesday, July 14, 2026

40 Things You Should Keep to Yourself (Because Not Everyone Deserves Front-Row Seats to Your Life) 🤫☕

 


There's a strange belief floating around these days that being an "open book" is the same thing as being authentic.

It's not.

Authenticity is honesty.

Oversharing is handing people the instruction manual on how to hurt you.

Here's a little life lesson that took some of us way too long to learn:

Not everyone clapping for you is cheering for you.

Some people are collecting information.
Some are comparing.
Some are gossiping.
Some are simply waiting for your next mistake.

And while healthy relationships are built on trust, trust should be earned—not handed out like free samples at Costco.

Here are 40 things you're usually better off keeping to yourself.

🤐 1. How much money you make.

Nothing changes a room faster than talking about income. It invites jealousy, judgment, or unsolicited financial advice from the cousin who still owes you twenty bucks.

🤐 2. Your deepest insecurities.

Share them with people who've earned your trust—not people looking for ammunition.

🤐 3. Every detail of your love life.

Some chapters belong to you, not the group chat.

🤐 4. Every detail of your next move.

Move in silence. Let your success make the announcement.

🤐 5. Your passwords.

This one should explain itself... unless you enjoy identity theft.

🤐 6. Every failure you've ever had.

Learn from them? Absolutely. Broadcast every single one? Not necessary.

🤐 7. Your family drama.

Protect your peace. Not every disagreement deserves an audience.

🤐 8. Every opinion you have about people.

Not every thought needs a microphone.

🤐 9. Every mistake from your past.

Your history explains you—it doesn't have to define every conversation.

🤐 10. That you secretly dislike someone.

Sometimes silence is the most mature response.

🤐 11. Your plans to quit your job.

Tell your boss when it's time—not Karen from accounting three months early.

🤐 12. How much you hate someone's style.

Unless they specifically asked... zip it.

🤐 13. That you think their partner is terrible.

Unless someone's safety is at risk, tread carefully.

🤐 14. Every penny you spend.

You don't owe anyone your financial report.

🤐 15. That you think you're better than someone.

Confidence is quiet. Arrogance carries a megaphone.

🤐 16. Your darkest thoughts.

Some conversations belong with trusted loved ones or a therapist—not social media.

🤐 17. Every good deed you do.

Kindness doesn't need a press release.

🤐 18. Every argument you have.

Not every disagreement needs spectators.

🤐 19. Every compliment you receive.

Stay humble.

🤐 20. Every criticism you hear.

Some opinions deserve the recycle bin.

🤐 21. Your exact savings account balance.

Privacy is underrated.

🤐 22. Every medical detail.

Share what you're comfortable with—not what people feel entitled to know.

🤐 23. Every dream before it's ready.

Too many opinions can kill momentum.

🤐 24. Every fear.

Some fears lose power when you face them—not when you feed them.

🤐 25. Your children's private struggles.

Protect their story, too.

🤐 26. Every favor you've done.

If you're keeping score, it wasn't generosity.

🤐 27. Every secret someone trusted you with.

Integrity is remembering what isn't yours to tell.

🤐 28. Every relationship problem.

Your relationship shouldn't become everyone's group project.

🤐 29. Your entire strategy.

Chess players don't announce their next move.

🤐 30. Every rumor you hear.

Don't become free Wi-Fi for gossip.

🤐 31. Your insecurities about aging.

Everyone's getting older. Some just use better lighting.

🤐 32. Every personal goal.

Sometimes quiet progress is the fastest progress.

🤐 33. Every victory.

Celebrate—but you don't need to post every trophy.

🤐 34. Every disappointment.

Some things are better processed than performed.

🤐 35. Your emergency backup plans.

Not everyone rooting for Plan A deserves to know Plan B.

🤐 36. Every opinion during every argument.

Winning isn't always worth the relationship.

🤐 37. Every emotional reaction.

Pause. Not every feeling deserves immediate airtime.

🤐 38. Everything you know.

Wisdom also means knowing when not to speak.

🤐 39. Every opportunity that comes your way.

Protect it until it's real.

🤐 40. Your peace.

The happiest people aren't always the loudest. Sometimes they're simply too busy living to explain every move.

The Bottom Line

Privacy isn't being fake.

It's being wise.

Not everyone needs unlimited access to your thoughts, your plans, your finances, your relationships, or your heart. The older you get, the more you realize that peace often grows in the space where oversharing used to live.

So share your kindness.
Share your laughter.
Share your wisdom.

But remember...

Just because someone asks doesn't mean they're entitled to the answer.

Sometimes the most powerful response is a smile, a sip of coffee, and a simple...

"That's personal." 😉

 


 


Silence Is My Favorite Boundary... It Saves Me So Much Time. 😌☕

 


There's a funny thing that happens when you stop chasing explanations.

You start paying attention.

Not to what people say they'll do...

But to what they actually do.

Because words are cheap. We've all met someone whose vocabulary could win an Oscar while their actions couldn't make it through a dress rehearsal.

"I've got you."

"We should get together."

"I'll call you."

"I'd do anything for you."

Cool story.

I'll believe it when your actions stop ghosting your promises.

One of the greatest forms of peace I've found isn't calling people out every single time they disappoint me.

It's quietly taking notes.

Not because I'm bitter.

Not because I'm plotting revenge.

I'm simply updating your file.

You don't answer unless you need something?

Noted.

You only support me when there's an audience?

Noted.

You disappear when life gets hard but magically reappear when it's convenient?

Noted... with a highlighter.

The older I get, the less interested I am in begging people to be who they already showed me they aren't.

I don't have the energy to host meetings about basic respect.

I'm not submitting a PowerPoint presentation titled, "Here's How You Could Stop Being Inconsistent."

No thanks.

Instead, I adjust.

I stop overextending.

I stop expecting.

I stop making excuses for behavior that keeps introducing itself.

And here's the part people don't like...

When you start matching energy, suddenly you're the one who's "changed."

Yep.

Because apparently having boundaries is offensive to people who benefited from you not having any.

Funny how that works.

Here's the truth:

Protecting your peace isn't petty.

It's mature.

You don't owe unlimited access to people who consistently bring limited effort.

Relationships—whether they're friendships, family, coworkers, or romantic—aren't built on grand speeches.

They're built on consistency.

Respect.

Reciprocity.

Showing up.

And if someone continually chooses not to?

Believe them.

Don't argue.

Don't audition for a role in their priorities.

Don't become a full-time detective trying to decode mixed signals.

Your energy is expensive.

Spend it on people who invest back.

Because respect isn't something you should have to beg for.

It's something that's naturally exchanged.

So these days, I don't make dramatic exits.

I don't announce my departure.

I simply adjust my seat at the table...

Or quietly leave it.

After all, silence has an amazing way of saying,

"I noticed."

And sometimes...

That's all that needs to be said. 😉

What the Fuck Season: The Universe Is Really Testing My Subscription Right Now

 


Somewhere between "I've got this" and "I might just become a raccoon and live in the woods" is a magical little chapter of life I like to call...

The "What the Fuck?" Season.

You know the one.

Your plans ghost you.

Your bank account starts playing hide-and-seek.

Technology decides today is the day it quits.

People you've bent over backward for suddenly develop selective amnesia.

And life keeps throwing plot twists like it's getting paid by the cliffhanger.

At some point, all you can do is stare into the void and mutter:

"I can't wait to get past whatever the fucking fuck stage this is in my life right now... because what the fuck?"

Honestly? Fair.

But here's the part nobody likes to hear...

Sometimes life isn't trying to destroy you.
Sometimes it's just aggressively editing your story.

Does it have to use a chainsaw instead of scissors?
Apparently.

The good news?

Every single person who's ever built a life they're proud of has had at least one chapter where absolutely nothing made sense. The chapter where they questioned everything. The chapter where they seriously considered deleting all social media, moving to a cabin, and communicating only through interpretive dance.

Growth isn't always inspiring.

Sometimes growth looks like:

  • Drinking your coffee before it gets cold.
  • Not texting the person who deserves a strongly worded TED Talk.
  • Laughing because crying has become repetitive.
  • Continuing to show up even when life feels like it's running a beta version with a lot of bugs.

Here's your reminder:

You have survived 100% of your previous "What the fuck?" moments.

Even the ones you were convinced would break you.

Spoiler alert:
They didn't.

One day you'll look back at this season and laugh.

Not because it was funny...

But because the universe really had the audacity.

Until then?

Keep moving.

Keep laughing.

Keep giving life the side-eye.

And remember...

If life insists on being ridiculous, you might as well be the funniest person in the room.

Because sometimes sarcasm isn't a coping mechanism...

It's a survival skill. 😏

Monday, July 13, 2026

 🏡 580 Credit Score? Don’t Count Yourself Out Yet! 👀

Let’s bust a homebuying myth today…

My credit score is only 580, so I can’t buy a house.

🚨 WRONG! (Well… not always 😉)

A 580 credit score does not automatically mean your dream of homeownership is over. There may be mortgage options available, and yes — there are even down payment assistance programs that may go down to a 580 credit score! 🎉

Before you decide you’re “not ready,” let’s look at the whole picture:

✅ Your income
✅ Your debts
✅ Your credit history
✅ Your goals
✅ Available assistance programs

Sometimes the biggest obstacle isn’t your credit score… it’s believing you have to wait years before you can even ask the question. 😉

Your credit score is a number — it does NOT define whether you can become a homeowner. 🏡

Want to know where you stand? Let’s have a conversation. No pressure. No judgment. Just options. ❤️

📲 Michelle Bivens
Senior Mortgage Originator
NMLS #812331
Delta Mortgage Services
📧 mbivens@deltamortgageservices.com
☎️ 443-831-0554 (Direct)

🏠 Equal Housing Lender

Mushroom and Spinach Saute Recipe Idea

 


Great recipe to get all your “healthy veggies” in along with a serving of protein. Try 6 oz. Of grilled chicken or 5 oz. of steak for a great summer meal!
Mushroom and Spinach Saute

Ingredients:

2 teaspoons olive oil
2 cups sliced fresh mushrooms
2 garlic cloves, minced
2 cups fresh baby spinach
1/8 teaspoon salt
1/8 teaspoon pepper

Directions:

1. In a large skillet, heat oil over medium-high heat. Add mushrooms; saute until tender, about 2 minutes. Add garlic; cook 1 minute longer. Add spinach in batches; cook and stir until wilted, about 1 minute. Season with salt and pepper. Serve immediately.
Makes 2 servings