Thursday, March 12, 2026

Forged in Fire: The Quiet Power of the Woman Who Refused to Break


 


There’s a certain kind of woman the world likes to admire.

You know the one.

The strong one.
The dependable one.
The one people say things about like, “She’s so tough,” or “Nothing phases her.”

What most people don’t realize, though, is that women like that didn’t wake up one random Tuesday and decide, “You know what would be fun? Becoming emotionally bulletproof.”

No.

Life handed her the hammer.
And the fire.
And sometimes the whole dang forge.

Strength Isn’t Born… It’s Built

The truth is, the strongest women you know usually have stories they don’t tell.

Not because they’re hiding them.
But because they’ve already lived them, survived them, and moved forward.

They’ve been shattered in ways most people will never see.
Heartbreak.
Disappointment.
Loss.
Betrayal.
Moments where the weight of life felt like it was sitting directly on their chest.

Moments where they thought, “I don’t know if I can do this.”

But here’s the thing about women like that.

They did it anyway.

Not perfectly.
Not gracefully.
Sometimes through tears, frustration, and a few “What the heck is even happening right now?” moments.

But they kept moving.

The World Sees the Strength… Not the Price

People love to compliment strong women.

“You’re amazing.”
“You handle everything so well.”
“You’re so resilient.”

And while those words are kind… they sometimes miss the point.

Because strength like that didn’t come free.

It was built through long nights no one witnessed.
Tears wiped away before anyone noticed.
Picking yourself up when no one else was there to help.

It was built in the quiet moments where quitting would have been easier.

But she didn’t.

The Quiet Reset No One Talks About

Even the strongest woman in the room has her moments.

Maybe it’s standing in the shower letting the water wash away the stress of the day.

Maybe it’s the quiet stillness before the world wakes up.

Maybe it’s a deep breath in the car before walking into a room where she’s expected to hold everything together.

Those moments?

They aren’t weakness.

They’re maintenance.

Even warriors need to sharpen their swords.

The Real Secret of Strong Women

Here’s something people often misunderstand:

Strong women aren’t fearless.

They just refuse to let fear drive the car.

They’re not unbreakable.

They’ve simply learned how to rebuild themselves when life tries to knock them apart.

They’re not perfect.

They’ve just decided that failure doesn’t get to write their story.

From Ashes to Power

Some women don’t just survive hard things.

They transform because of them.

The heartbreak becomes wisdom.
The setbacks become resilience.
The pain becomes purpose.

Life may have tried to burn them down more than once.

But instead of staying in the ashes…

They rose from them.

Stronger.
Smarter.
Fiercer.
And unapologetically themselves.

To the Women Who Keep Going

If you’re one of those women — the ones who keep showing up even when life feels heavy — just know something:

People may never fully understand what it took for you to become who you are.

But your strength?
Your resilience?
Your refusal to quit?

It matters.

Because every time you stand back up, you remind the world of something powerful:

Some women don’t just walk through the fire.

They become it. 🔥


The Life Lessons Nobody Sends You in the Welcome Packet

 


The Life Lessons Nobody Sends You in the Welcome Packet


Somewhere between the chaos of trying to build a life and the quiet moments where you finally pause long enough to reflect, life starts handing out some very interesting lessons.

Not the cute Pinterest quote kind.

The real kind.
The kind that arrive after a little heartbreak, a few bad decisions, some hard truths, and the occasional moment where you stare at the ceiling at 2:13 a.m. thinking, “Well… that was a learning experience.”

And if you're lucky enough to pay attention, those lessons slowly start reshaping how you move through the world.

Let’s talk about a few of the life upgrades that tend to arrive a little later than we expected.

Not Everyone Deserves Your Energy or Loyalty

This one can take a while to land.

When you're younger, you often believe loyalty means sticking around no matter what. You show up, give your time, your effort, your patience—sometimes even when the other person clearly hasn’t earned it.

Eventually, life teaches a powerful truth:

Loyalty should be reciprocal, not one-sided charity work.

Energy is a limited resource.
If someone constantly drains yours while contributing absolutely nothing in return… congratulations, you’ve discovered what experts call a bad investment.

And just like bad investments, sometimes the smartest move is simply closing the account.

Time Is More Valuable Than Almost Anything

Money can come and go.
Opportunities come and go.
Even mistakes can be corrected.

But time?

Once it's gone, it's gone.

That realization tends to hit harder later in life. You begin to understand that the real luxury isn’t just financial success—it’s how you spend your time and who you spend it with.

Which leads to a very important life filter:

If something constantly wastes your time, drains your energy, or disrupts your peace…
it probably doesn’t belong in your life.

Simple math.

Peace Is Priceless

At some point, the thrill of drama loses its charm.

You start choosing calm conversations over arguments.
Quiet evenings over chaos.
Healthy boundaries over constant emotional gymnastics.

And let’s be honest for a second:

Sometimes people will accuse you of “changing” when you start protecting your peace.

To which the correct response is usually:

“Yes. That’s called growth.”

Failure Is Not the End — It’s the Setup

One of the biggest myths we grow up believing is that failure means you're done.

In reality, failure is usually just the rough draft of success.

Every successful person has a long list of things that didn’t work first. Businesses that failed. Plans that collapsed. Ideas that flopped spectacularly.

Failure isn't a full stop.

It's a comma.

It's the moment where life says:
"Okay… that way didn’t work. Try again with more wisdom."

Time With People You Love Beats Almost Everything

Late in life, very few people say:

“I wish I had bought more stuff.”

What people actually say is:

“I wish I had spent more time with the people who mattered.”

The laughs.
The dinners.
The long conversations.
The random moments that seemed ordinary at the time but somehow became the memories you treasure later.

Things break.
Memories don't.

You Can't Control Other People's Reactions

This lesson can be frustrating… but also incredibly freeing.

You can communicate clearly.
You can act with integrity.
You can show kindness.

But you cannot control how someone else chooses to interpret or react to those things.

Some people will misunderstand you.
Some will project their own issues onto you.
Some will simply decide they don’t like you.

And that’s okay.

Your job is authenticity, not universal approval.

Letting Go Isn’t Giving Up — It’s Growing

Letting go doesn’t mean something wasn’t important.

Sometimes it means you’ve finally realized that holding on is hurting more than it’s helping.

You let go of relationships that no longer align.
You release expectations that were unrealistic.
You walk away from situations that stopped serving your well-being.

Not because you’re weak.

But because you’re wise enough to choose growth over attachment.

Self-Care Isn’t Indulgent — It’s Maintenance

Somewhere along the way, society tried to convince people that taking care of themselves was selfish.

Spoiler alert: it isn’t.

You cannot pour from an empty cup.
You cannot show up as your best self if you're constantly exhausted, stressed, or overwhelmed.

Self-care isn't luxury.

It's basic emotional and mental maintenance.

Think of it like changing the oil in your car.

Ignore it long enough and eventually… things break.

Your Intuition Gets Stronger With Experience

Early in life we often ignore our instincts.

Later, we realize something powerful:

That quiet inner voice usually knew what was going on the entire time.

Experience sharpens intuition.

You start recognizing patterns faster.
You trust your gut more.
And you become less willing to ignore red flags just to keep the peace.

Because deep down, you know:

Your intuition is usually trying to protect you.

Happiness Comes From Alignment — Not Perfection

One of the most liberating lessons life teaches is that happiness isn't about getting everything perfect.

It’s about alignment.

Living in a way that reflects your values.
Spending time with people who respect you.
Doing work that feels meaningful.
Creating a life that feels peaceful instead of performative.

Perfection is exhausting.

Alignment, on the other hand?

That’s where real happiness lives.

Final Thought

The funny thing about life lessons is that they rarely arrive when we expect them.

They show up through mistakes.
Through growth.
Through difficult moments that eventually turn into wisdom.

And while we might wish we had learned some of them sooner…

There’s something powerful about earning them through experience.

Because once you truly understand these lessons, you start living differently.

With clearer boundaries.
Stronger intuition.
Better priorities.

And a deeper appreciation for the things that truly matter.

Which, when you think about it…

Might actually be the whole point. ✨

Reuben Casserole Recipe Idea

 


🍀Reuben Casserole🍀
Makes 4 servings
Per serving:
1 Lean
2 Greens
½ Condiment
Ingredients: 🍖
24oz jar Sauerkraut (Rinsed and drained-You will need 20oz)
12oz Deli corned beef, rinsed and chopped (We don’t want to use this often because of the high sodium content)
6.4oz part skim Swiss cheese, shredded
4TBSP Walden Farms Thousand Island dressing
Non-stick spray
Preheat oven to 400⁰.
Directions: 🧑‍🍳
(I used a 9x9 baking pan, and visualized it as working in 4 equal sections. I divided the ingredients in the sections as I added them.)
First, spray lightly with non-stick spray, and spread the sauerkraut evenly in the pan. Next, add the Thousand Island Dressing, and spread evenly over the sauerkraut. Then, evenly sprinkle about 2oz of the Swiss cheese. Add the corned beef. Sprinkle the rest of the Swiss cheese on top.
Bake for 30 minutes.
This sounds so delicious!!! 🤤

What Toddlers Understand About Boundaries That Adults Completely Forgot


 


Somewhere along the way between diapers and adulthood… we lost the plot.

Because toddlers?
Toddlers understand boundaries at an elite level.

Imagine this scenario.

You’re walking through the grocery store. Someone you absolutely do not want to talk to spots you and starts heading your way. Before they even get the first sentence out of their mouth you simply:

Look them dead in the eyes.
Scream “NO.”
Then dramatically run away.

No awkward small talk.
No fake smiles.
No pretending you’re thrilled to hear a 20-minute story about their cousin’s coworker’s dog.

Just pure, honest boundary enforcement.

Honestly… toddlers might be the most emotionally evolved people in society.

Adults, on the other hand?

We see someone we don’t want to talk to and suddenly we become Broadway actors in the longest-running performance of Fake Politeness: The Musical.

“Oh hiiiii! How are you???”
Internally: Please let this be quick. Please let this be quick. Please let this be quick.

Then somehow you end up stuck in a conversation you didn’t ask for, didn’t plan for, and can’t escape from because you were raised with something called social norms.

And while social norms are great for things like:

  • Not screaming in restaurants

  • Wearing pants in public

  • Not biting people who annoy us

…they have also trapped us in millions of unnecessary conversations we never wanted to have in the first place.

Toddlers, however, have no such problem.

Toddlers operate under a very simple philosophy:

“If I don’t like this situation, I’m leaving immediately.”

No explanation.
No overthinking.
No emotional committee meeting.

Just NOPE.

Now, I’m not suggesting adults should start screaming in people’s faces at the grocery store. Society would collapse within hours.

But I am saying toddlers might be onto something important.

Because somewhere along the way we were taught that protecting our peace makes us:

  • rude

  • difficult

  • antisocial

When really it just means we’re aware of our energy and where we want to spend it.

Toddlers don’t tolerate nonsense because they haven’t learned how to perform politeness for the comfort of others yet.

And honestly?

There’s a little wisdom in that.

Not the screaming part.

(Although… let’s be honest… sometimes the screaming part feels justified.)

But the clarity.

Toddlers don’t waste time pretending to enjoy things they don’t enjoy.

They don’t stay in uncomfortable situations just to avoid being perceived as rude.

They trust their feelings and respond immediately.

Meanwhile adults will sit through an entire conversation thinking:

“How do I escape this without being weird?”

The truth is, protecting your peace isn’t rude.

It’s healthy.

You don’t have to scream “NO” and run away like a tiny human tornado…

…but you can absolutely learn the adult version of toddler boundaries.

Short conversations.
Polite exits.
Energy protection.

Because life is too short to spend it trapped in conversations that make your soul slowly leave your body.

So maybe we don’t need to fully adopt the toddler method…

…but we could definitely borrow a little bit of their boundary-setting confidence.

And if all else fails?

There’s always the grocery store aisle escape strategy.

You know the one.

The sudden turn.
The fake phone call.
The dramatic study of cereal boxes you have absolutely no intention of buying.

Not quite toddler-level honesty…

…but still a solid survival skill.

And honestly?

The toddler who screamed “NO” and ran away is probably home right now…

Living their best, boundary-filled life. 😌

I’m starting to think toddlers might actually have life figured out.

Imagine seeing someone you don’t want to talk to…

They open their mouth and you simply yell “NO!” and run away.

No awkward small talk.
No fake politeness.
No pretending.

Just protecting your peace immediately.

Honestly… the boundaries are elite. 😂

It’s the Principle: Why Accountability Feels So Offensive to Some People


 


Let’s talk about something that seems to confuse a lot of people lately:

The principle of things.

You know… that moment when someone says,
“Why are you so upset? It’s not that big of a deal.”

And you’re sitting there thinking:

“It’s not WHAT you did… it’s HOW you did it.”

Because most of the time, the issue isn’t the action itself.

It’s the disrespect, the intention, the lack of consideration, and sometimes the wild double standard that comes along with it.

The Double Standard Olympics

One of the most fascinating things about human behavior is how some people react when the roles are reversed.

When they do something wrong?
Suddenly we’re supposed to show grace.
Be understanding.
Remember nobody’s perfect.

But if you did the exact same thing?

Oh, now we’re holding a full press conference about respect, loyalty, and how “people have changed.”

It’s amazing how quickly the rules change depending on who broke them.

The Applause That Prevents Growth

Here’s the real problem though.

Some people never mature because they have a personal cheerleading squad around them at all times.

No matter what they do, someone is there to say:

“Don’t worry about it.”
“You didn’t mean it.”
“They’re just being sensitive.”
“You’re fine.”

And just like that, accountability quietly exits the room.

Because when someone is constantly surrounded by people who justify their behavior, they never have to face the uncomfortable truth that maybe they were actually wrong.

Growth requires reflection.

Reflection requires honesty.

And honesty doesn’t usually come from a group chat full of enablers.

Accountability Isn’t an Attack

Some people treat accountability like it’s a personal attack.

It’s not.

Accountability is simply recognizing that your actions affect other people.

It’s saying:

“Yeah… I could have handled that better.”

That level of maturity shouldn’t be rare, but somehow it feels like a luxury these days.

Instead, many people would rather defend their behavior than learn from it.

Because admitting you were wrong requires something many people are still working on…

Ego control.

The Principle Still Matters

At the end of the day, the principle of something matters because it reveals character.

Anyone can say the right words when everything is going well.

But how someone handles being wrong, being called out, or being asked to take responsibility?

That tells you everything.

And if someone consistently avoids accountability while expecting it from everyone else…

Well, that’s not a misunderstanding.

That’s a pattern.

Final Thought

The truth is simple:

Right is right. Wrong is wrong.

And maturity is the ability to recognize the difference even when you’re the one who messed up.

So if someone tells you “it’s the principle of the thing,” don’t dismiss it.

Because principles are what keep respect, integrity, and relationships intact.

Without them?

You just have a lot of people doing whatever they want…
with a crowd in the background clapping for behavior that probably should have been corrected a long time ago. 👏

When the Door Slams: Why “Goodbye” Is Sometimes the Best Plot Twist

 



Let’s talk about something we all hate but eventually experience: the unexpected goodbye.

The job you worked your tail off for.
The opportunity you prayed about.
The relationship you poured your time, love, patience, and probably a few tears into.

Then one day… poof.
Gone.
Up in smoke.
No explanation. No warning. No neat little bow tying up the ending.

And naturally, what do we do?

We become full-time detectives in the Mystery of “Why Did This Happen to Me?”

We replay conversations.
We reread messages.
We analyze every detail like we’re preparing evidence for a courtroom drama that no one else is attending.

Meanwhile life is over there like:
“Ma’am… the train has already left the station.”

The Dangerous Obsession With “Why”

Here’s the uncomfortable truth:
Not every ending comes with an explanation.

Sometimes you get fired even though you were the model employee.
Sometimes the person who said “forever” suddenly develops amnesia about that word.
Sometimes the opportunity you worked for collapses overnight.

And the human brain hates this. We want closure. We want logic. We want a clear answer.

But sometimes the only real answer is:

“Because that chapter was finished.”

I know. Not exactly the satisfying Netflix ending we were hoping for.

The Plot Twist We Don’t Notice

What we often miss is that a closed door is rarely just an ending — it’s a redirection.

Life has a funny way of clearing space for things we couldn’t reach while we were still holding onto the old.

Think about it.

How many people stay in a job that stopped growing them years ago?
How many relationships continue long past their expiration date because leaving feels scary?
How many dreams do we cling to simply because we’ve already invested so much time in them?

Sometimes the thing leaving your life isn’t a loss.

Sometimes it’s divine decluttering.

And if we’re being honest… sometimes the door didn’t gently close.

Sometimes it slammed shut with the enthusiasm of a screen door in a hurricane.

That’s usually a sign.

Losing the Baggage

One of the hardest lessons in life is realizing that not everything you wanted was meant to stay.

Some things were meant to teach you something.
Some things were meant to grow you.
Some things were meant to prepare you.

But they were never meant to be permanent.

And the moment we release what’s old, something powerful happens.

We create space.

Space for better opportunities.
Better people.
Better versions of ourselves.

You can’t receive something new if your hands are still gripping tightly to what already left.

The Goodbye That Leads Somewhere Better

Here’s the part we usually only see in hindsight.

The job you lost might lead to a career that finally values you.
The relationship that ended might clear the path for someone who actually shows up.
The dream that fell apart might make room for something bigger than you originally imagined.

But when you’re in the middle of the loss, none of that feels comforting.

It just feels unfair.

And that’s okay. You're allowed to feel disappointed. You’re allowed to grieve what you thought your life was going to look like.

Just don’t build a permanent residence there.

Because the truth is:

Sometimes goodbye isn’t rejection.
Sometimes it’s redirection.

The Next Chapter Is Waiting

So instead of exhausting yourself trying to solve the mystery of “why,” try asking a different question:

“Where could this be leading me?”

Because if a door closed, there’s a very good chance it’s because what was behind it couldn’t take you where you’re meant to go next.

And one day you’ll look back at the moment that felt like everything fell apart…

…and realize it was actually the moment everything started coming together.

Even if, at the time, it felt like life kicked the door shut and said:

“Trust me on this one.” 🚪✨

Wednesday, March 11, 2026

Too Grown for Drama, Too Focused for Distractions💯

 




There comes a point in life where drama stops being entertaining and just starts being… embarrassing.

Not funny embarrassing.
Not “oops that was awkward” embarrassing.

I’m talking about the kind of embarrassing where you sit back and think, “We are entirely too grown for this.”

At a certain age, life has already handed you enough lessons, enough chaos, enough plot twists to last several lifetimes. You’ve survived heartbreaks, setbacks, misunderstandings, and probably a few seasons where everything felt like it was falling apart at once. So the last thing anyone with a little wisdom under their belt wants to do is voluntarily sign up for extra drama.

Because here’s the truth most people eventually figure out:

Drama is expensive.

Not in money… but in energy, peace, focus, and time. And those things are far more valuable.

Every unnecessary argument, every petty misunderstanding, every moment spent trying to explain yourself to people committed to misunderstanding you — that’s time and energy you could have spent building something meaningful. A career. A business. A better mindset. A peaceful life.

At some point, the glow-up isn’t just about how you look.

It’s about how you live.

It’s choosing peace over proving a point.
It’s choosing progress over pettiness.
It’s choosing growth over gossip.

And the funny thing about growth is this: when you start focusing on your peace and your purpose, a lot of drama naturally disappears. Not because the world suddenly becomes calm, but because you stop entertaining chaos.

You stop responding to every little thing.
You stop explaining yourself to people who aren’t listening.
You stop letting nonsense rent space in your mind.

Instead, your priorities shift.

You start protecting your energy like it’s valuable currency — because it is.

You start asking yourself better questions like:
Is this worth my time?
Is this helping me grow?
Is this adding anything meaningful to my life?

If the answer is no… you simply move on.

That’s real boss energy.

Not loud, flashy, or dramatic — just calm, focused, and unbothered.

Because when your mind is clear and your peace is intact, you have room to do things that actually matter. Build your future. Chase your goals. Create opportunities. Make money. Build relationships with people who uplift you instead of draining you.

And the truth is, peace and progress often go hand in hand.

When your life isn’t constantly tangled up in drama, you have the clarity to move forward. To think bigger. To work smarter. To create the kind of life that feels good to wake up to.

So if you ever find yourself standing at the crossroads between drama and peace, here’s a simple philosophy to keep in mind:

Choose the life that lets you sleep well at night.

Choose the path that protects your peace.

Choose the mindset that keeps you moving forward.

Because at this stage in life, the real flex isn’t arguing louder, proving people wrong, or winning petty battles.

The real flex is living well, staying peaceful, and building a life you don’t need a vacation from.

Now that’s #BossEnergy. 💯✨


Stop Building a Life for Applause — Build One That Actually Feels Good

 



Let’s read this slowly for the people in the back… and for the ones still trying to live a life that looks good on Instagram but feels like emotional overtime in real life.

Somewhere along the way, society convinced a lot of people that success has to look flashy, loud, impressive, and slightly exhausting. Big houses. Perfect photos. Highlight reels. Carefully curated “look how amazing my life is” posts.

Meanwhile behind the scenes?
Half of those people are tired, overwhelmed, and secretly wishing they could just take a nap and not answer anyone for three days.

But here’s the plot twist nobody talks about enough:

A good life doesn’t have to look impressive to strangers. It just has to feel right to you.

And honestly? That realization alone saves people years of chasing things they never even wanted in the first place.

The Lie We’ve Been Sold

We’ve been told life should follow a certain script:

  • Do what everyone expects

  • Keep up appearances

  • Don’t rock the boat

  • Don’t start over

  • Definitely don’t choose peace if it means disappointing people

Because apparently if your life isn’t shiny enough for social media… then it must not be successful.

Meanwhile the people quietly building peaceful lives are over there like:

“Sorry I missed the chaos… I was busy enjoying my sanity.”

The Real Flex Is a Peaceful Life

Let’s be honest. The older you get, the more you realize something important:

Peace is wildly underrated.

Not waking up with anxiety.
Not constantly proving yourself.
Not being surrounded by people who drain your battery faster than your phone on 1%.

The real luxury in life isn’t always money or status.

Sometimes it’s simply:

  • A calm mind

  • A few solid people

  • A life that doesn’t require constant recovery from it

And honestly? That’s worth more than a perfectly curated online life any day.

Starting Over Isn’t Failure

One of the bravest things a person can do is start over.

New mindset.
New boundaries.
New friendships.
New priorities.

And yes, sometimes that means leaving behind environments, habits, or even people who were comfortable but no longer healthy.

Society loves to act like starting over means you failed.

No.

Sometimes it means you finally stopped settling.

Choose Joy (Even When the World Is Loud)

The world right now can feel harsh, loud, chaotic, and occasionally like everyone woke up and chose stress.

Which is exactly why choosing joy on purpose matters.

Not fake positivity.
Not pretending life is perfect.

But choosing to focus on what’s working instead of constantly obsessing over what isn’t.

Because your mind is like a garden.

You can grow:

  • Gratitude

  • Hope

  • Peace

  • Optimism

Or you can let weeds of comparison, negativity, and other people’s opinions grow wild.

And spoiler alert… the weeds grow faster if you don’t manage them.

Build Your Life Like It’s a Garden

Your life isn’t something that just magically happens.

It’s something you build, curate, prune, and protect.

You choose:

  • Who gets access to your energy

  • What voices you listen to

  • What dreams you chase

  • What version of yourself you grow into

And sometimes that means letting go of the life you thought you were “supposed” to have… so you can finally create the one that actually fits you.

The Truth Nobody Says Out Loud

Nobody deserves a life they love more than you do.

But here’s the part people don’t like hearing:

You do have to build it.

You have to trust yourself.
You have to choose yourself.
You have to stop living according to expectations that were never yours to begin with.

And yes… sometimes that means people won’t understand your choices.

But those same people also aren’t the ones living your life.

Let Your Life Bloom

At the end of the day, your life isn’t meant to be a performance.

It’s meant to be lived.

So build the life that makes you smile in the quiet moments.

Choose peace even when the world says hustle harder.
Choose joy even when negativity is trending.
Choose growth even when starting over feels scary.

And most importantly…

Stop worrying if your life looks impressive.

Because the real goal isn’t applause.

It’s waking up and realizing you actually like the life you’ve built. 🌿

Before You Point Fingers… Check Your Own Bandages


 


There’s a quiet kind of wisdom in asking for the ability to see your own flaws clearly. Not the pretty ones we like to admit to sound humble… but the real ones. The messy ones. The ones we’d rather pretend belong to someone else.

Because if we’re being honest, humans have a PhD in spotting other people’s nonsense. Oh, we can diagnose someone else’s attitude, bad habits, and questionable life choices faster than WebMD after a late-night symptom search.

But when it comes to our own issues? Suddenly we’re legally blind.

Here’s the truth most people don’t love hearing:
Before you go around pointing fingers, remember you’re doing it with a hand that probably needs a little cleaning too.

And that’s not an insult… it’s just reality.

The Finger-Pointing Olympics

Some people treat life like a competitive sport called Blame Everyone Else.

  • Your relationship failed? Obviously the other person.

  • Your bad mood? Definitely someone else’s fault.

  • Your drama? Oh no… that was caused by other people reacting to you.

Funny how that works.

Meanwhile the same people will spend hours dissecting someone else’s mistakes but five seconds reflecting on their own behavior. That math never adds up.

The Real Flex Is Self-Awareness

Pray for the ability to see your own hypocrisy. Not because you want to beat yourself up, but because self-awareness is the upgrade most people skip.

It takes humility to say:
“Yeah… that one might’ve been on me.”

And let’s be real… that level of honesty is rare. In a world where everyone wants to be right, the person willing to grow is the one actually winning.

Let’s Talk About Those “Abscesses”

That line hits deep: we all have abscesses that need tending.

Translation:
We all have emotional infections we’ve ignored.

Old wounds.
Bad habits.
Attitudes that probably need a little spiritual antibiotics.

But instead of healing them, people often cover them with a Band-Aid labeled “Look at what THEY did.”

Spoiler alert:
Ignoring your own issues while highlighting everyone else’s just makes the infection spread.

Growth Is an Inside Job

The most powerful people in the room are rarely the loudest critics. They’re the ones quietly doing the work:

  • Checking their ego

  • Owning their mistakes

  • Learning from their mess instead of decorating it

Because once you start fixing yourself, you suddenly stop needing to fix everyone else.

Funny how that happens.

A Little Humble Reminder

So yes, pray for the ability to see your own sins, your own hypocrisy, and your own shortcomings.

Not because you’re terrible.

But because clarity creates growth.

And the truth is… the world doesn’t need more perfect people pretending they have it all together.

It needs more people willing to say:
“Yeah… I’ve got some things to work on too.”

Just remember—before you go performing surgery on someone else’s character…

Make sure your own wounds aren’t still leaking.

That’s not judgment.
That’s wisdom.

And honestly? A little self-awareness would solve about 90% of the drama people keep blaming on everyone else. 😉

Tuesday, March 10, 2026

Spaghetti Squash Hash Brown Recipe Idea


 

Spaghetti Squash Hash Brown
Makes 2 servings
Ingredients:
• 2 cups cooked & shredded spaghetti squash (about 1/2 small cooked squash)
• 1 tablespoon oil
• ½ teaspoon Salt, to taste (optional)
Directions
Heat the oil in a large non stick skillet over medium heat.
Press the water out of the squash with paper towels.
Form little patties (2 tablespoons or so) by pressing the squash firmly between your palms.
Place the patties gently on the warmed skillet and let cook for 5-7 minutes per side. Only flip these once if possible to get the nice browned effect.
Transfer to paper towels to drain, then serve warm. Sprinkle with some salt if desired.