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. 😭😂

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. 🤦‍♀️💀

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


 

Energy Vampires Are Exhausting… and I’m Fresh Out of Free Refills


 


At some point, you realize you’re not “too sensitive” or “too distant.”
You’re just tired. Tired of pouring into people who treat your kindness like an unlimited free trial with no expiration date. 😌

I know better now than to keep sharing my vibrancy with people who only show up to consume it. Some folks will happily sit in your light while contributing absolutely nothing but stress, confusion, drama, and emotional invoices you never agreed to pay.

Those are called energy vampires.
And baby… they stay hungry. 😂

You know the type:

  • They call only when their world is on fire.
  • They dump every problem on you but disappear when you need support.
  • They expect understanding, patience, loyalty, access, and emotional labor… while giving the bare minimum in return.
  • Somehow every conversation leaves YOU emotionally dehydrated.

Whew. Absolutely not anymore.

I’ve learned that having empathy does not mean accepting emotional exhaustion as a lifestyle. Being a caring person should never require self-abandonment. Mutual respect, reciprocation, and understanding are not “too much to ask.” They’re the bare minimum.

And honestly? Some people confuse access with entitlement.
Just because I’m kind doesn’t mean you get unlimited VIP entry to my peace, time, energy, and sanity. The doors close now. Business hours changed. 😂💅

These days, I pay attention to energy more than words.
Who checks on me?
Who celebrates me?
Who only appears when they need something?
Who drains the room the second they enter it?

Because protecting your peace isn’t selfish — it’s survival.

I’m no longer shrinking myself to keep others comfortable. I’m no longer overexplaining boundaries to people committed to crossing them anyway. And I’m definitely not volunteering to be the emotional support human for people who refuse to heal themselves.

My energy is expensive now.
And if someone only knows how to take without pouring back into me?
Respectfully… they can find another power source. 😌

Thursday, May 14, 2026

 

Just a friendly reminder… keep your chin up 😌

Because when you look down, you’ve got two… and honestly nobody asked for the bonus double-chin feature.

Stay confident, stay cute, and if all else fails—blame bad angles and move on like Barbie would

Wednesday, May 13, 2026

💳🏡 CREDIT IMPROVEMENT CHECKLIST (Mortgage Mama Edition) 😄







Let’s be real… credit scores have caused more stress than most people’s exes. 😂
But the good news? Credit is not “fixed,” it’s BUILT — and you have more control than you think.

Here’s your simple, no-fluff checklist to start improving your credit:

📊 1. Check your credit reports (all 3 bureaus)
Look for errors, old accounts, or anything that doesn’t belong to you.

💰 2. Pay down high balances first
Focus on revolving debt (credit cards) — utilization matters more than people realize.

⏰ 3. Pay everything on time (no “I forgot” era allowed 😅)
Payment history is the BIGGEST factor in your score.

🚫 4. Don’t open or close accounts randomly
Credit likes stability… not emotional decision-making. 😂

📉 5. Keep balances under 30% (ideally under 10%)
Lower utilization = happier credit score.

🔍 6. Avoid unnecessary hard inquiries
Every “just checking rates” spree can add up.

📈 7. Add positive credit activity
Think: secured cards, credit-builder loans, or consistent reporting accounts.

Here’s the truth nobody says enough:
Small, consistent habits beat “quick fixes” every single time.

And if homeownership is your goal, your credit doesn’t have to be perfect — it just needs a plan. 🏡✨

From your Mortgage Mama 💁🏼‍♀️🏡
If you want help understanding where you stand or what steps could help you qualify, I’ve got you.

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


Sometimes Love Doesn’t Die… It Just Gets Tired 😮‍💨💀


 


Nobody really talks enough about how feelings fade.

People think love disappears overnight like a dramatic movie scene where you suddenly wake up, toss their hoodie out the window, and yell “I’m finally free!” while sad music plays in the background.

Nah. Real life is less cinematic and more:
“Wow… I genuinely don’t have the energy for this anymore.” 😅

Because most of the time, you don’t stop loving someone all at once.
Your feelings slowly pack their bags after repeated disappointment, confusion, mixed signals, broken promises, and emotional chaos disguised as “love.”

At first, you excuse things:

  • “They’re just stressed.”
  • “They didn’t mean it.”
  • “Nobody’s perfect.”
  • “Maybe I’m overreacting.”

Meanwhile your nervous system is filing complaints with management every week 🚩😂

The truth is, love can survive a lot… but it struggles to survive consistent inconsistency.

Nothing drains attraction faster than:

  • Feeling ignored
  • Begging for effort
  • Carrying the emotional weight alone
  • Repeating yourself 47 times like a human podcast nobody subscribed to
  • Getting the bare minimum packaged like it’s some grand romantic gesture

Baby… replying “good morning” after disappearing for 2 days is not emotional growth. Please be serious 😭

And here’s the part that surprises people:
Sometimes the feelings disappear the exact moment clarity shows up.

You suddenly realize:
“I’ve been in love with who they could be… not who they consistently are.”

Oof. That realization could humble a grown adult real quick.

Because when you truly love someone, you naturally try to see the best in them. You become patient. Understanding. Loyal. You water the relationship hoping it’ll bloom.

But eventually, exhaustion walks into the chat.

One day you notice:

  • You stopped checking your phone constantly
  • Their attention no longer excites you
  • The silence feels peaceful instead of painful
  • You no longer feel the need to explain yourself
  • You’re emotionally detaching while they still think you’ll always stay

And honestly? That emotional shutdown usually didn’t come from lack of love.

It came from too much hurt.

People don’t realize how dangerous repeated disappointment is. It slowly turns passion into numbness. Effort into obligation. Love into survival mode.

And let’s add a little uncomfortable truth here:
Some people get so used to your forgiveness that they mistake it for permanence.

They think:
“She’ll get over it.”
“She’s not leaving.”
“She loves me too much.”

Until one day… you’re just done.

No yelling.
No long paragraph.
No dramatic exit speech.

Just emotionally clocked out like an employee who finally hit their limit 😂✌️

And weirdly enough? That’s often when the other person suddenly wants to “fight for the relationship.”

Sir/Ma’am… where was this energy when I was crying, communicating, begging, explaining, and losing sleep? The customer service department is now closed 😌

Here’s the helpful part nobody says enough:
Losing feelings isn’t failure.

Sometimes it’s your mind and body finally protecting you from staying attached to something that continuously hurt you.

Not every connection is meant to last forever. Some people teach lessons, not lifetimes.

And the moment peace starts feeling better than chaos?
That’s when healing quietly begins 💕

Her Crown Isn’t Stealing Yours, Sis 👑🤍

 



It’s wild how some people act like another woman succeeding somehow personally attacked their WiFi connection. 😂

A woman posts her business?
“Must be nice.”

She buys a house?
“She probably had help.”

She looks confident?
“She thinks she’s all that.”

Meanwhile… supporting her would’ve cost exactly $0 and zero cents.

Here’s the truth nobody says enough:
Another woman shining does not dim your light. Her win is not your loss. Success is not a limited-edition Stanley cup people are fist-fighting over at Target. There is room for all of us.

Supporting another woman can literally be as simple as:

  • Liking her post
  • Sharing her business
  • Leaving an encouraging comment
  • Referring clients
  • Celebrating her without secretly competing with her in your head

That’s it. No blood oath required.

And honestly? The women who clap for others without jealousy are usually the ones most secure in themselves. They understand abundance. They know opportunities multiply when women stop treating each other like opponents in a reality show nobody auditioned for.

Because deep down, insecurity makes people weird.
A confident woman says:
“Look at her go!”

An insecure one says:
“But why her?” 👀

There’s enough stress in life already. Bills are high. Gas prices are disrespectful. The group chats are exhausting. We do not also need imaginary competitions with women we could be networking with instead. 😭

Support is powerful. A single share can bring someone clients. A kind comment can keep someone from giving up. Encouragement matters more than people realize.

And let’s normalize this too:
You can admire another woman’s beauty, success, confidence, intelligence, or lifestyle without questioning your own value.

Her magic doesn’t erase yours.

So clap louder. Compliment freely. Support genuinely. And if another woman is winning? Cheer for her like the universe isn’t running out of blessings.

Because trust me — bitter energy burns calories but never builds empires. 💅✨

If Your Presence Feels Like an Emotional Group Project… That’s Your Sign 🚩😂


 


There comes a point in life where you stop asking,
“Do they like me?”

…and start asking,
“Why do I need a 3-hour recovery nap after talking to them?” 😅

Because honestly? Your nervous system has receipts your heart keeps trying to delete.

We’ve spent way too long being taught to ignore our own emotional warning lights. We excuse chaos because someone is charming. We tolerate disrespect because they’re “going through a lot.” We romanticize inconsistency like it’s a personality trait instead of a red flag doing jumping jacks in front of our face.

Meanwhile your body is over there like:
“Bestie… this situation is giving survival mode.” 🚨

You ever notice how some people leave you feeling:

  • Drained
  • Overthinking every conversation
  • Re-reading texts like an FBI investigator
  • Questioning your worth for absolutely no reason
  • Stress eating chips at midnight while pretending you’re “fine”

Yeah. That’s not chemistry. That’s emotional cardio nobody signed up for.

Then there are people who leave you feeling:

  • Calm
  • Seen
  • Motivated
  • Comfortable being yourself
  • Like you don’t have to perform, shrink, or decode mixed signals written in ancient hieroglyphics

Those are your people.

The older I get, the more I realize peace is attractive. Not the fake “I’m unbothered” kind while internally spiraling. Real peace. The kind where you don’t feel emotionally audited every time you speak.

And let’s be honest for a second — some folks swear they “love your energy” while actively being the reason your battery stays on 2%. Please be serious. 😂

Not everybody deserves unlimited access to you just because they can text “wyd.”
Some people are lessons.
Some are blessings.
And some are unpaid internships in emotional damage.

A helpful rule?
Pay attention to patterns, not potential.

If every interaction leaves you anxious, exhausted, confused, or feeling “not enough,” your body already knows what your brain is still trying to negotiate.

Stop trying to convince yourself to stay in places your peace keeps trying to escape from.

Because the right people won’t make you feel like you need to recover from them. 💯

Tuesday, May 12, 2026

If I Have to Explain Why It Hurt, You Already Missed the Point

 



There’s a special kind of exhaustion that comes from having to explain basic consideration to grown adults. Not complex emotional theory. Not a TED Talk on human decency. Just simple, everyday awareness.

Like:

  • “Hey, disappearing for three days after saying you care about me was confusing.”
  • “Maybe don’t embarrass me publicly and call it a joke.”
  • “If you knew it would upset you, why would you do it to someone else?”

And somehow, instead of accountability, you get confusion. Defensiveness. Olympic-level mental gymnastics. Suddenly you’re the difficult one because you noticed the behavior.

Amazing.

The truth is, genuinely considerate people don’t usually need a tutorial on empathy. They move with awareness naturally. They think:

“Would this hurt me if someone did it to me?”

And if the answer is yes, they usually… don’t do it.

Revolutionary concept, apparently.

The Problem Isn’t Always the Action — It’s the Awareness

Everyone makes mistakes. People forget things. Misread situations. Say dumb stuff. We’re human.

But there’s a huge difference between:

  • “I didn’t realize, but now I understand.”
    and
  • “I didn’t realize, and honestly, I still don’t see why it matters.”

That second one? That’s where relationships start quietly packing their bags.

Because when someone consistently needs empathy translated into subtitles and diagrams, it forces you into a permanent role you never applied for:

  • emotional customer service representative,
  • conflict resolution specialist,
  • part-time life coach,
  • full-time exhaustion manager.

At some point, you stop feeling loved and start feeling like a behavioral training program.

“That’s Just How I Am” Is Not a Personality

One of the wildest social trends is people using self-awareness as an excuse instead of a correction.

“I’m just blunt.”
“I’m bad at communicating.”
“I don’t think about stuff like that.”

Okay. And?
That’s not accountability. That’s a warning label.

Being honest doesn’t require cruelty.
Being independent doesn’t require inconsistency.
Being “unintentionally hurtful” repeatedly eventually starts looking very… intentional.

At minimum, it says:

“Your experience isn’t important enough for me to adjust.”

And that stings more than the original action sometimes.

Empathy Isn’t Perfection

Let’s be fair: nobody is considerate 100% of the time. We all have moments where stress, ego, distraction, or ignorance gets in the way.

But empathy shows up in the aftermath.

It sounds like:

  • “I can see why that hurt.”
  • “I didn’t mean to make you feel that way.”
  • “I’ll be more mindful next time.”

Not:

  • “You’re too sensitive.”
  • “That wasn’t my intention.”
  • “You always overthink things.”

Side note: if multiple people keep calling you inconsiderate, the common denominator isn’t astrology.

Stop Over-Explaining Your Pain to People Committed to Misunderstanding It

This part matters.

Some people aren’t lacking understanding.
They’re lacking motivation to care.

And once you realize that, you stop wasting energy trying to deliver the perfect explanation that will finally unlock basic compassion in them like a secret video game level.

Because people who value you usually don’t need twelve presentations, three examples, and a flowchart titled:

“Why disrespect feels disrespectful.”

They may not get it immediately.
But they care enough to try.

That’s the difference.

The Quiet Power of Considerate People

The most emotionally safe people aren’t usually the loudest about it.

They just:

  • communicate clearly,
  • think before acting,
  • apologize without turning it into a courtroom defense,
  • and pay attention to how they affect others.

No performance.
No “nice guy” speeches.
No asking for a medal because they managed to behave respectfully for 48 consecutive hours.

Just maturity. Consistency. Awareness.

Which, these days, honestly feels rarer than affordable groceries.

Final Thought

Real empathy isn’t performative. It’s instinctive consideration.

And while people absolutely can learn and grow, it’s okay to admit that constantly teaching someone how to care is draining.

You deserve relationships where basic respect isn’t a group project.
Where your feelings don’t need a defense attorney.
Where consideration arrives naturally — not only after a 45-minute explanation and emotional PowerPoint presentation.

Because if someone truly values you, care won’t feel like a concept you have to keep introducing them to.