Wednesday, June 17, 2026

Stop Editing Yourself for People Who Aren't Even Reading the Manual

 


At some point, most of us become amateur actors.

We learn which parts of ourselves get applause.

Which parts get side-eyes.

Which quirks make people uncomfortable.

And before we know it, we're out here performing a heavily edited version of ourselves like we're the director, producer, and star of a reality show called "Please Like Me."

Exhausting, isn't it?

Here's the thing nobody tells you:

The people who truly belong in your life aren't looking for perfection.

They're looking for authenticity.

They don't need you to be flawless.

They need you to be real.

The real you.

The one who laughs too loud.

The one who sings the wrong lyrics with full confidence.

The one who gets excited over weird things.

The one who sometimes overthinks text messages and then pretends not to.

The one who has scars, stories, lessons, and a collection of mistakes that helped shape who they are today.

Because perfection is boring.

Seriously.

Have you ever met someone who seemed absolutely perfect?

It's usually intimidating for about five minutes and then you realize they're either hiding something or they're secretly a robot.

Real people are far more interesting.

They're quirky.

They're imperfect.

They're occasionally awkward.

They laugh at inappropriate times.

They cry during commercials.

They have strengths, flaws, contradictions, and moments where they wonder why they walked into a room.

Twice.

And that's exactly what makes them beautiful.

One of the greatest gifts you can give yourself is permission to stop shrinking.

Stop filtering.

Stop polishing every rough edge until you become unrecognizable.

Not everyone is going to understand you.

Not everyone is going to appreciate your weirdness.

And that's okay.

You are not a limited-edition collectible designed for mass appeal.

You're a one-of-a-kind human being.

The goal isn't to be liked by everyone.

The goal is to be loved by the right people.

The people who laugh at your jokes.

Appreciate your heart.

Accept your flaws.

And don't require you to become someone else just to earn a seat at the table.

Because the truth is, your imperfections are often the very things that make you memorable.

Your quirks are your charm.

Your scars are your wisdom.

Your weirdness is your magic.

And the people worth keeping around won't just tolerate those things.

They'll adore them.

So be yourself.

The beautiful version.

The messy version.

The healing version.

The evolving version.

The slightly chaotic version.

All of it.

Because life gets a lot lighter when you stop trying to fit into spaces that were never built for you and start showing up exactly as you are.

And if someone doesn't like the authentic you?

That's valuable information.

It saves you from wasting years pretending to be someone you're not.

Which, if we're being honest, is a fantastic return on investment.

So let them see the real you.

The imperfect, flawed, quirky, weird, beautiful, magical masterpiece that you are.

The right people won't be scared away.

They'll feel relieved they finally found someone real.


Final Thought: The people who matter won't expect you to be perfect. They'll appreciate that you're genuine. Everyone else can enjoy the edited version of someone else's life. 😉💜

Small Package, Major Warning Label


 There seems to be a widespread misconception that short girls are all sunshine, sprinkles, and conveniently travel-sized sweetness.

And to be fair...

Most of the time, we are.

We're out here being adorable. Reaching for things on the top shelf with determination and mild hostility. Looking innocent in photos. Making people think we're tiny little bundles of kindness.

But then...

Someone decides to test our patience.

And suddenly they're acting shocked.

SHOCKED.

As if they weren't just poking a bear that happens to be closer to the ground.

Listen, short girls spend their entire lives overcoming obstacles.

The world is literally built too high for us.

Kitchen cabinets? Challenge.

Store shelves? Challenge.

Bathroom mirrors? Humiliating.

We've been climbing counters and developing creative problem-solving skills since childhood.

You think that doesn't build resilience?

The mistake people make is assuming height and intimidation are related.

They are not.

Some of the most dangerous creatures on earth are small.

Honey badgers.

Wolverines.

Chihuahuas.

And apparently, short women who have finally run out of patience.

The truth is, most short girls are incredibly easygoing.

We laugh.

We love.

We mind our business.

We just ask that you don't mistake kindness for weakness.

Because when someone repeatedly disrespects us, pushes boundaries, plays games, or acts like basic human decency is optional, something magical happens.

The cute little chipmunk leaves the building.

And what emerges is a tiny, highly caffeinated force of nature operating entirely on principle and spite.

It's not anger.

It's efficiency.

We've simply decided that if we're going to have to climb this mountain of nonsense, we're going to address the source of it while we're here.

And let's be honest...

People always say they want honesty until a short girl delivers it with bullet-point accuracy and supporting documentation.

Then suddenly we're "intense."

No, Susan.

We're just thorough.

The lesson here?

Respect the short girls.

Not because we're scary.

Not because we're mean.

But because we've spent our entire lives proving that size has absolutely nothing to do with strength, confidence, or the ability to verbally rearrange someone's attitude when necessary.

We're sweet.

We're cute.

We're fun.

We're loyal.

But if you keep pushing buttons you weren't authorized to touch, don't be surprised when that adorable little chipmunk turns into a furry ball of consequences.

You've been warned.

Respectfully.


Moral of the story: Short girls are basically fun-sized fireworks. Cute to look at, fun to be around, and generally harmless... unless someone lights the fuse. 😏🔥💥

It's Not About the Thing. It's About the Choice.

 


We've all been there.

You bring up something that bothered you, and someone immediately responds with:

"Seriously? You're upset about THAT?"

And that's when you realize you're speaking two completely different languages.

Because no, Karen, Chad, or whoever is auditioning for the role of "Missing the Entire Point" this week... it's not about the thing.

It's about the principle.

The forgotten text isn't about the text.

The lie isn't about the lie.

The disrespect isn't about the one isolated moment.

It's about the fact that out of all the options available, someone consciously chose THAT behavior.

That's the part people miss.

See, emotionally intelligent adults don't just evaluate actions by their size. They evaluate them by what they reveal.

A shopping cart left in the middle of a parking lot isn't going to destroy civilization.

But it does tell you something.

Returning it also tells you something.

Holding a door for someone tells you something.

Not saying thank you tells you something.

How people treat others when they don't have to be kind tells you something.

Tiny actions are often character references disguised as everyday moments.

That's why some people get frustrated when others dismiss their concerns as "not a big deal."

Because they're not looking at the event.

They're looking at the pattern.

They're looking at the mindset behind it.

They're looking at the decision-making process that led someone to think:

"Yep. This is how I'm going to move."

And before someone starts yelling, "Nobody's perfect!"

Correct.

Nobody is asking for perfection.

We're asking for accountability.

There's a massive difference.

People make mistakes. Good people own them.

People forget things. Good people acknowledge them.

People screw up. Good people apologize without turning themselves into the victim of their own apology.

Revolutionary concept, I know.

The real issue starts when someone consistently chooses selfishness, dishonesty, manipulation, disrespect, or carelessness and then expects everyone around them to focus only on the size of the offense instead of the character it reveals.

That's like setting off a fire alarm and then arguing about the volume instead of the smoke.

And here's where age, wisdom, and a few thousand unnecessary life lessons start paying dividends:

You stop arguing.

You stop overexplaining.

You stop presenting Exhibit A through Exhibit Z trying to convince people why their behavior mattered.

Because people who genuinely care will understand.

People who don't care will debate.

The older you get, the more you realize that every interaction is information.

Every choice is information.

Every reaction is information.

And when someone repeatedly shows you how they think, how they treat people, and what they prioritize, your job isn't to argue with the evidence.

Your job is to believe it.

Not because you're judgmental.

Not because you're bitter.

But because life gets a whole lot simpler when you stop listening to people's explanations and start paying attention to their patterns.

So no...

It's not always about the situation.

Sometimes the situation is tiny.

Microscopic, even.

But the principle behind it?

That's where the real story lives.

And sometimes a person's smallest choices tell you everything you needed to know before the bigger choices ever arrive.


Bottom line: The issue isn't the spilled milk. It's whether someone looked at the mess they made and thought, "I should clean that up" or "Not my problem." That's the principle. And principles have a funny way of exposing character long before character gets tested in the big moments. 😉

Dear Brain, We're Going to Need a Better Morning Meeting


 


I came across a quote that said:

According to neuroscience, if you repeat these three phrases every morning, you'll start rewiring your brain to become more positive, confident, and grateful.

The first phrase was:

"Show me how good today gets."

And honestly?

That's a much better way to start the day than the traditional morning affirmations most of us use.

You know, things like:

"I don't want to get out of bed."

"Who scheduled all these meetings?"

"If one more person tests me today, we're both going to learn something."

Apparently, our brains are constantly looking for evidence to support whatever we're already thinking.

If you wake up expecting disaster, your brain becomes a detective searching for proof that the day is terrible.

Traffic? Proof.

Spilled coffee? Proof.

Email from your ex? Exhibit A.

But when you start your day with:

"Show me how good today gets."

You're essentially giving your brain a new assignment.

Instead of hunting for problems, it starts noticing opportunities.

Instead of focusing on what's wrong, it starts spotting what's right.

Now before anyone rolls their eyes so hard they see their own childhood memories, this isn't some magical fairy-dust formula.

You're not going to wake up, say one sentence, and suddenly find a suitcase full of money, your dream relationship, and abs.

That's not neuroscience.

That's called winning the lottery.

What this phrase does is shift your focus.

Because let's be honest—most of us spend a lot of time expecting things to go wrong.

We're mentally preparing for disappointment before the day has even had a chance to introduce itself.

We're creating entire disaster documentaries in our heads based on absolutely no evidence.

A text goes unanswered for two hours and suddenly we've written a six-part Netflix series called:

"Why Everyone Secretly Hates Me."

The brain can be dramatic.

Very dramatic.

Oscar-worthy dramatic.

So maybe the goal isn't pretending life is perfect.

Maybe it's simply training ourselves to look for possibilities instead of problems.

To notice blessings instead of just burdens.

To ask:

"What if something good happens today?"

Because here's the savage little truth:

A lot of people spend years waiting for life to improve while actively rehearsing negativity every single morning.

They're watering weeds and wondering why flowers aren't growing.

Your thoughts matter.

Your focus matters.

And the stories you tell yourself matter.

So tomorrow morning, before checking social media, before reading the news, before giving your anxiety a microphone and a spotlight, try saying:

"Show me how good today gets."

Will it solve all your problems?

No.

Will it help you notice more reasons to smile, more opportunities, more gratitude, and more moments worth appreciating?

Very possibly.

And let's be honest...

That's a much better morning strategy than immediately checking your bank account and ruining your mood before breakfast.

Baby steps.  🤷😉

Artificial Intelligence Is Coming… and Frankly, I'm Concerned About the Comparison

 


I saw a meme the other day that said:

"They say the machines of the future will be as smart as people."

And I immediately thought:

"Okay, but which people? Because that makes a huge difference."

Seriously.

Are we talking about the people curing diseases, inventing life-changing technology, and sending rockets into space?

Or are we talking about the people who hit "Reply All" to a company-wide email just to say, "Thanks"?

Because those are wildly different levels of intelligence.

The conversation around Artificial Intelligence always sounds so dramatic.

"One day, machines will think like humans!"

Will they?

Because some humans still lock themselves out of accounts they've had for ten years and then act surprised when the password isn't "password123."

Some people ignore every warning sign, every red flag, every instruction manual, and then blame everyone else when things go sideways.

Meanwhile, AI can process millions of pieces of information in seconds.

Yet somehow, there are still people arguing with their GPS while simultaneously being lost.

The future is fascinating.

But let's not pretend humanity is setting a consistently high bar.

And before anyone gets offended, let's be honest—we've all had moments.

We've all walked into a room and forgotten why.

We've all searched for our phone while holding it.

We've all reread the same sentence five times because our brain decided to go on vacation without notice.

The difference is that humans aren't supposed to know everything.

What makes us smart isn't having all the answers.

It's being willing to learn.

It's being curious.

It's asking questions.

It's admitting when we're wrong instead of treating every disagreement like we're defending a doctoral thesis we never actually wrote.

That's where real intelligence lives.

Not in knowing everything.

But in understanding that you don't.

The smartest people I've ever met aren't usually the loudest people in the room. They're the ones listening, learning, adapting, and changing their minds when presented with better information.

That's a skill a surprising number of people have traded in for stubbornness and Facebook comments.

And if we're being completely honest, that's where the machines may eventually outperform us.

Because AI doesn't take constructive criticism personally.

AI doesn't refuse to learn because its feelings got hurt.

AI doesn't double down on being wrong just because it already announced its opinion publicly.

Humans, however...

Well.

Let's just say some of us could benefit from a software update.

So maybe the question isn't whether machines will become as smart as people.

Maybe the question is whether people will continue becoming smarter themselves.

Because technology keeps evolving.

The challenge is making sure our thinking evolves right along with it.

Otherwise, one day a robot is going to look at humanity, sigh deeply, and ask:

"Wait... THESE were the people we were supposed to be modeled after?"

And honestly?

That's a fair question.

Tuesday, June 16, 2026

Check the Conversation Before You Pull Up a Chair


 


There's a quote that says:

"Sit at a table where they talk about love, gratitude, faith, and goals, not people."

And honestly?

That might be one of the most underrated life hacks out there.

Because whether we realize it or not, the conversations we surround ourselves with eventually become the thoughts we carry around.

Think about it.

Have you ever left a conversation feeling inspired, energized, and motivated to chase your goals?

And then have you ever left another conversation feeling emotionally exhausted, slightly irritated, and somehow fully informed about seventeen people whose business had absolutely nothing to do with you?

Exactly.

Not all tables feed you.

Some just drain you.

Some tables discuss ideas.

Some discuss growth.

Some discuss dreams, opportunities, faith, gratitude, and ways to build a better life.

And some spend three hours discussing what Karen posted on Facebook in 2019 and what that "probably means."

Spoiler alert:

Karen is not paying your bills.

Karen is not helping you achieve your goals.

Karen is not responsible for your happiness.

Karen doesn't deserve that much free rent in your brain.

The older I get, the more I realize that the most successful, peaceful, and emotionally healthy people I know rarely spend their time dissecting other people's lives.

They're too busy building their own.

They're talking about business ideas.

Travel plans.

Personal growth.

Family.

Faith.

Dreams.

Lessons they've learned.

Ways to improve.

Things they're grateful for.

And here's the funny thing:

When people are genuinely fulfilled, they don't need gossip as entertainment.

Because they actually have lives they enjoy living.

Now let's be clear.

This doesn't mean you can never discuss people.

Humans are social creatures. Sometimes we need advice. Sometimes we need support. Sometimes we need to vent before we lose what little patience we have left.

That's normal.

What's not healthy is when talking about other people becomes the main event.

When every conversation turns into a criticism convention.

When negativity becomes the group hobby.

When everyone knows everybody else's business but nobody is doing anything meaningful with their own.

That's not connection.

That's just a book club for drama.

And the membership fee is usually your peace.

The truth is, your environment matters.

The people around you influence your mindset more than you realize.

If you're constantly surrounded by people who complain, gossip, criticize, and judge, eventually you'll find yourself doing the same.

Not because you're a bad person.

Because attitudes are contagious.

Thankfully, so are positivity, gratitude, ambition, and faith.

That's why it's important to choose your tables carefully.

Choose people who celebrate growth.

Choose people who inspire action.

Choose people who challenge you to become better.

Choose people who discuss possibilities instead of problems.

Choose people who leave you feeling hopeful instead of heavy.

Because one day you'll realize that the conversations that changed your life weren't the ones where everyone sat around analyzing someone else's mistakes.

They were the ones where people talked about purpose.

About dreams.

About gratitude.

About becoming the kind of person they were proud to be.

So before you take a seat, pay attention to what's being served.

If the main course is gossip with a side of negativity, you might want to grab your purse and head for the exit.

But if the menu includes love, gratitude, faith, goals, growth, and a little laughter along the way?

Pull up a chair.

You've found your people. ❤️✨

Maybe You're Not Naive... Maybe You're Just Kind


 


There's a quote that says:

"Someone told me this today: It's a credit to your character that you do not understand why people do unkind things. So instead of despairing over and picking apart someone's lack of compassion and consideration towards you, celebrate the fact that yours is abundant enough to never treat people in that manner."

And honestly?

That might be one of the most healing things I've heard in a long time.

Because if you're a good-hearted person, you've probably spent way too much time trying to solve the mystery of why someone treated you poorly.

You replay conversations.

You analyze texts.

You dissect situations like you're starring in your own personal episode of CSI: Emotional Damage Unit.

You ask yourself:

"Why would they do that?"

"How could they say that?"

"Didn't they care how that would make me feel?"

And because you're compassionate, your brain keeps searching for an explanation that makes sense.

But here's the problem:

Sometimes there isn't one.

Sometimes the answer is simply that not everyone operates with the same level of kindness, empathy, or consideration that you do.

I know.

It's annoying.

Most of us would actually prefer a complicated answer involving childhood trauma, Mercury being in retrograde, or a secret underground society of emotionally unavailable people.

But sometimes people are just... selfish.

Sometimes they're careless.

Sometimes they're so focused on themselves they don't even notice the impact they have on others.

And here's where many kind people get stuck:

They assume everyone thinks the way they think.

If you wouldn't intentionally hurt someone, you struggle to understand how someone else could.

If you would communicate, apologize, or show compassion, you assume others will too.

Spoiler alert:

Not everyone received the same operating manual.

That's why one of the hardest lessons in life is realizing that your inability to understand someone's cruelty isn't a weakness.

It's evidence of your character.

Think about that.

The reason you're confused by their behavior is because that behavior doesn't exist naturally in your heart.

You don't understand it because it's foreign to you.

And that's actually something to be proud of.

Now, this doesn't mean you should become a doormat.

Let's not get carried away.

Being kind doesn't require accepting poor treatment.

You can have a good heart and excellent boundaries.

In fact, I highly recommend it.

Nothing confuses toxic people more than someone who is both compassionate and unwilling to tolerate nonsense.

It's like watching a toddler discover a childproof lock.

They're absolutely baffled.

The goal isn't to become harder.

The goal is to become wiser.

To stop asking:

"Why weren't they more like me?"

And start saying:

"I'm grateful I'm not like them."

Because every time someone lacks compassion, integrity, or consideration, you have a choice.

You can obsess over what they're missing.

Or you can appreciate what you possess.

Your kindness.

Your empathy.

Your ability to care.

Your willingness to show up with a good heart, even in a world that sometimes rewards the opposite.

That's not weakness.

That's strength.

So if you're currently hurting because someone's behavior makes absolutely no sense to you, consider this:

Maybe the reason you can't understand their lack of compassion is because compassion comes naturally to you.

And while that may occasionally leave you disappointed, it also makes you the kind of person this world desperately needs more of.

Protect that.

Nurture that.

Celebrate that.

Because a hardened heart may avoid disappointment, but a kind heart changes lives.

And between the two?

I'll take the kind heart every single time. ❤️

Do the Hard Shit


 


There's a quote that says:

"Do hard shit, not because it's fun, but because the win actually means something. You've bled for it, you've broke for it, you've fucking earned it. Easy wins are forgettable, but hard ones change you."

Let's be honest.

Nobody wakes up in the morning excited to do hard things.

Nobody jumps out of bed yelling, "You know what sounds amazing today? Rejection, setbacks, self-doubt, and a few emotional breakdowns sprinkled in for character development!"

No. We want easy.

We want fast.

We want Amazon Prime results with dial-up effort.

But life doesn't work that way.

The things that truly change you usually arrive wrapped in struggle, frustration, uncertainty, and at least three moments where you're convinced you've completely lost your mind.

The hard conversations.

The hard decisions.

The hard boundaries.

The hard healing.

The hard work nobody sees.

That's where the transformation happens.

And here's the part social media doesn't always tell you:

Growth is rarely glamorous.

Most success stories sound inspiring after they're over.

While you're living them, they mostly feel like stress, caffeine, stubbornness, and repeatedly asking yourself, "What fresh hell is this?"

But that's exactly why the win matters.

Because you know what it cost.

You remember the nights you wanted to quit.

The times you doubted yourself.

The moments you had absolutely no idea how things were going to work out.

Yet somehow, you kept moving.

Maybe not gracefully.

Maybe not confidently.

Maybe while muttering profanity under your breath.

But you moved.

And that's what separates people who grow from people who stay stuck.

The willingness to keep going when motivation packs its bags and leaves town.

Because motivation is flaky.

Discipline shows up.

Persistence shows up.

Resilience shows up.

Even when they're tired.

Especially when they're tired.

The truth is, easy wins are nice.

They give you a little dopamine hit.

A quick celebration.

A momentary ego boost.

But hard wins?

Those are different.

Hard wins build confidence.

Hard wins build character.

Hard wins create the version of you that wouldn't exist without the struggle.

The person standing on the other side isn't just holding a trophy.

They're carrying wisdom, strength, experience, and proof that they can survive things they once thought would break them.

And that's priceless.

So if you're currently in the middle of something difficult, don't assume you're failing.

You might simply be earning a victory worth remembering.

The hard season isn't punishment.

It's preparation.

The challenge isn't there to destroy you.

It's there to reveal what you're actually made of.

And one day, when you finally reach the finish line, you'll realize something surprising:

The achievement wasn't the biggest reward.

The person you became while earning it was.

Now go do the hard shit.

Your future self is counting on it.

And frankly, proving a few doubters wrong is just a fun little bonus. 😉🔥

Nice vs. Nice-Looking: Learn the Difference


 There's a quote that says:

"Fake people are only nice when it's convenient for them, or they usually have a hidden agenda. Genuinely nice people go out of their way to help others, and they have an honest heart. You can't fake that."

And honestly? That quote deserves a standing ovation and a slow clap.

Because one of life's most expensive lessons is learning that not everyone who smiles at you is rooting for you.

Some people are nice because they want something.

Some people are nice because there's an audience.

Some people are nice because they need a favor.

And some people are nice because that's simply who they are when nobody's watching.

That's the difference.

Fake kindness is transactional.

It keeps score.

It comes with invisible invoices.

It sounds like:
"Look at everything I've done for you."
"After all I've done..."
"I just thought you'd help me out since I helped you."

Translation: Congratulations! You accidentally signed up for a loyalty rewards program you didn't know existed.

Genuine kindness doesn't work that way.

People with honest hearts help because helping feels right, not because they're secretly collecting emotional receipts for future redemption.

They're the people who check on you when they don't need anything.

The people who celebrate your wins without competing with them.

The people who show up when life gets messy, not just when it's convenient for a photo opportunity.

And here's the thing fake people hate:

Time exposes everybody.

Eventually, the mask slips.

The hidden agenda becomes obvious.

The compliments start sounding suspiciously strategic.

The support disappears the moment there's nothing left to gain.

Because maintaining a fake personality is exhausting. Sooner or later, people reveal themselves.

Always.

That's why it's important to pay attention to patterns, not performances.

Anyone can be charming for an afternoon.

Anyone can post inspirational quotes.

Anyone can act supportive when the spotlight is on.

Character isn't revealed by what people do occasionally.

It's revealed by what they do consistently.

And before we get too comfortable pointing fingers, let's remember something:

Being genuine doesn't mean being perfect.

Real people have bad days.

They get frustrated.

They make mistakes.

They sometimes say the wrong thing.

But their intentions remain honest.

They don't treat relationships like networking events.

They don't view people as opportunities.

And they don't disappear the moment the benefits run out.

At the end of the day, trust actions more than words.

Trust consistency more than promises.

Trust character more than charm.

Because a fake person can fool you for a while.

But they can never successfully fake a genuinely good heart forever.

That kind of authenticity doesn't require acting.

It simply exists.

And unlike fake kindness, it doesn't come with terms and conditions. 😉🔥

If Accountability Feels Like an Attack, You Might Be the Problem

 

Whew. Somebody check the smoke alarms because that one came in hot.

Let's be honest: not everyone who dislikes you is a hater. Sometimes people genuinely don't vibe with your personality, your opinions, your energy, or your refusal to participate in the Olympic sport of pretending everything is fine when it's clearly on fire.

And that's okay.

The funny thing about accountability is that it's usually welcomed right up until it applies to us.

People love honesty... until honesty shows up wearing their name tag.

They'll ask for "real friends" who "tell it like it is," then suddenly you're the villain because you pointed out the behavior everyone else has been politely avoiding like a pothole in the middle of the road.

The truth is, some people aren't upset because you're wrong.

They're upset because you interrupted a very comfortable arrangement where nobody was expected to acknowledge reality.

Accountability isn't bullying.
It's not being mean.
It's not being "negative."

It's simply recognizing that actions have consequences, words matter, and being called out isn't the same thing as being attacked.

Now, let's add a little balance here.

Not every person claiming they're "just honest" is a truth-teller. Some people use honesty as a coupon code for being rude. There's a difference between constructive truth and unnecessarily setting the room on fire because you enjoy watching people panic.

But when truth is delivered respectfully and someone still reacts like you've personally declared war on their entire bloodline? That's usually not about your delivery.

That's about their discomfort.

Growth requires self-reflection.
Self-reflection requires accountability.
And accountability requires admitting that maybe—just maybe—we aren't always the innocent victim in every story we tell.

I know. Revolutionary concept.

So if someone dislikes you because you spoke a truth they weren't ready to hear, don't lose sleep over it.

Not everyone wants a mirror.

Some people prefer curtains.

And while they're busy being offended by reality, you can continue minding your business, protecting your peace, and refusing to participate in group delusions just to keep everyone comfortable.

Because sometimes the person everyone labels as "too much" is simply the one person brave enough to say what everyone else is already thinking.

And that tends to make people very uncomfortable.

Especially the ones benefiting from the free pass. 😉