Sunday, July 5, 2026

CHICKEN ALFREDO PIZZA πŸ•πŸ“πŸ•πŸ“πŸ•πŸ“πŸ•πŸ“πŸ•πŸ“πŸ•πŸ“πŸ•

 


CHICKEN ALFREDO PIZZA
πŸ•πŸ“πŸ•πŸ“πŸ•πŸ“πŸ•πŸ“πŸ•πŸ“πŸ•πŸ“πŸ•

Ingredients:
Crust
1 cup or 100 grams grated raw cauliflower
1/4 cup egg beaters
1/4 cup Reduced Fat 2% Mozzarella cheese

Toppings
2.25 oz chicken, cooked and chopped
1/4 cup Reduced Fat 2% Mozzarella Cheese
☆ To make the Alfredo Sauce
2 Light Garlic and Herb Cheese Wedges - 2 condiments
2 tbsp Half and Half (2/3 healthy fat)
1.5 tsp Reduced Fat Parmesan, grated - 3/4 condiment
1/8 tsp Molly McButter (1/4 condiment)

Directions:
Preheat oven to 425 degrees. Place parchment paper on a cookie sheet and spray lightly with cooking spray. Combine grated cauliflower, egg beaters, and 1/4 cup cheese until mixed completely. Spoon mixture on prepared pan with parchment paper. Use the back of a spoon to thin out mixture and form a circle about the size of a dinner plate without the rim. Bake for 30 minutes. Flip the crust over and bake an additional 10 minutes. Oven times may vary. Set aside.

Prepare Alfredo sauce by combining all ingredients for the sauce in a very small saucepan over medium low heat. Bring to a boil and stir constantly until sauce is bubbly and thickened. Remove from heat and stir in chicken. Set aside.
Top the crust with the chicken mixture. Top with 1/4 cup mozzarella. Broil until cheese is melted.

Serves 1 – with a full lean, 2 greens, and 3 condiments (can top with one serving of veggies likes spinach or mushrooms)

Pineapple JalapeΓ±o Chicken Crunch-Grilled Wraps with Smoky Chili Lime Cream

 


Pineapple JalapeΓ±o Chicken Crunch-Grilled Wraps with Smoky Chili Lime Cream
Ingredients:
• 2 cups cooked chicken, shredded
• 1 cup pineapple, diced
• 1 jalapeΓ±o, diced
• 1 cup shredded lettuce
• 1/2 cup shredded cheese (cheddar or pepper jack)
• 4 large tortillas or wraps
• 1/2 cup sour cream
• 1 tablespoon lime juice
• 1 teaspoon chili powder
• Salt and pepper to taste

Saturday, July 4, 2026

Surviving Isn't the Same as Being Okay (And That's a Conversation We Need to Have)

 




"She survived."

Bruh...

She twitches in her sleep.

Her heart races when voices get loud.

She apologizes for things that aren't her fault.

She flinches when someone slams a door.

She overthinks text messages.

She feels guilty for resting.

She expects people to leave.

But sure...

"She survived."

Some people hear the word survivor and picture someone standing on top of a mountain with dramatic movie music playing in the background.

Reality?

Sometimes surviving looks like checking every exit in a restaurant.

Sometimes it looks like laughing in public and crying in the shower.

Sometimes it looks like saying, "I'm fine," because explaining your nervous system feels like a full-time job.

Here's what I wish more people understood:

Healing isn't just about what happened to you.

It's about what your mind and body learned to do so they could keep you alive.

Your brain isn't being dramatic.

It's being protective.

Granted...sometimes it's a little overachieving.

Like, "Thanks, brain. I know the toaster popped, but I don't think we're under attack."

Our nervous systems can become incredibly good at spotting danger—even when danger isn't actually standing in the room anymore.

And while that can be exhausting, it also means your brain did exactly what it was designed to do: protect you.

The goal isn't to shame yourself for those reactions.

The goal is to gently teach your mind and body that they're safe enough to stop living in survival mode all the time.

So no...

Don't look at someone and say, "Well, you survived."

Say...

"I'm glad you're here."

"I know surviving came with a cost."

"I'm proud of you for healing instead of just existing."

Because surviving deserves respect.

But healing?

Healing deserves a standing ovation.

And if you're still working through the aftershocks, give yourself some grace.

You aren't weak because your nervous system remembers.

You're human.

And every single day you choose healing over hiding...

That's not just surviving anymore.

That's reclaiming your life.

# Stop Calling It Patience When It's Actually Self-Abandonment


 

"Tolerance always turns to resentment. At first, you call it patience... then love. But what it really is... is self-abandonment."

Oof.

Whoever wrote that didn't come to play.

Let's be honest for a second. Somewhere along the way, many of us were taught that being a "good person" meant tolerating things that slowly chipped away at our peace.

We called it:
"They're just having a hard time."

"Relationships take work."

"Nobody's perfect."

"I'll just let this one go..."

And then we let another one go.

And another.

Before long, we're carrying around enough unspoken frustration to qualify as emotional baggage on an international flight.

Here's the thing nobody tells you:

Patience is healthy.

Grace is beautiful.

Forgiveness is powerful.

But none of those require you to repeatedly volunteer as the emotional welcome mat.

There's a huge difference between giving someone room to grow... and giving them a permanent lease on your self-respect.

Because every time you silence your own needs to keep someone else comfortable, your soul notices.

Every time you ignore your gut because you don't want to seem "too much," your confidence takes another tiny hit.

Every time you excuse behavior that hurts you, resentment quietly starts unpacking its suitcase.

And resentment? It doesn't just show up angry.

It shows up exhausted.

Detached.

Cynical.

Wondering why you've become a stranger to yourself.

Here's my slightly sarcastic public service announcement:

You are not Amazon Prime.

You do not have to keep delivering unlimited chances with free shipping.

Healthy people appreciate grace.

Unhealthy people expect it indefinitely.

Read that again.

Setting boundaries doesn't make you cold.

Walking away doesn't make you selfish.

Saying "I've had enough" doesn't make you mean.

It means you've finally decided that abandoning yourself is no longer part of the job description.

The people who genuinely love you won't need you to disappear so they can stay comfortable.

So today, check in with yourself.

Where have you been calling something "love" that's actually fear?

Where have you labeled it "patience" when it's really just postponing the inevitable?

Because your peace isn't found in how much you can tolerate.

It's found in how deeply you're willing to honor yourself.

And that's a love story worth choosing every single time.

Sometimes the strongest act of love isn't giving someone one more chance—it's finally giving yourself one. πŸ’›

The Ten Narcissistic Commandments


 


Or... How to Lose Good People and Blame Them for Leaving.

Let's be honest...

If this list made you laugh a little... and then immediately think of someone...

Congratulations.

You've either survived a narcissist... or Thanksgiving dinner.

(Too soon? 😏)

Here's the thing...

People throw the word narcissist around like confetti these days. Your ex is one. Your boss is one. Your neighbor who won't return your hedge trimmers? Apparently one too.

But true narcissistic behavior isn't about being full of yourself.

It's about making everyone else pay the price for protecting an ego that's more fragile than a phone screen without a case.

Let's break down a few of these "commandments."

"I am right, and you are wrong."

Translation:

Evidence is optional.

Logic is negotiable.

And somehow... your apology is mandatory.

If facts don't support their argument, they'll simply create new facts.

It's almost impressive.

Almost.


"There is no 'you and me'—only me."

Healthy relationships say, "We're a team."

Narcissistic relationships say, "You're on my team... until you have your own opinion."

Funny how "partnership" suddenly becomes "insubordination."


"Nothing is ever enough."

You cleaned the house?

You missed a spot.

You bought them a thoughtful gift?

Wrong color.

You gave 100%?

They'll ask where the other 20% went.

Trying to earn validation from someone who keeps moving the finish line is like trying to fill a bucket with a hole in the bottom.

You'll exhaust yourself before you satisfy them.


"Your pain becomes my advantage."

This one hurts.

Because healthy people protect your vulnerabilities.

Manipulative people collect them.

They remember what hurts you—not to avoid it...

...but to use it later when they need to win an argument.

That's not love.

That's ammunition.


"Attention, control, and validation come before everything else."

Ever notice how the conversation somehow circles back to them?

Your promotion?

Their struggle was harder.

Your birthday?

Let's talk about what upset them last Tuesday.

You could announce you discovered a cure for Mondays...

...and they'd somehow make it about how you forgot to text them back three hours ago.

Olympic-level talent.

Zero medals for empathy.


Here's the Part I Really Want You to Hear...

This post isn't about diagnosing people.

It's about recognizing patterns.

You don't need a psychology degree to know when someone consistently leaves you feeling:

  • Confused.
  • Drained.
  • Guilty for having needs.
  • Afraid to speak honestly.
  • Responsible for fixing problems you didn't create.

That's your nervous system waving a giant red flag.

Believe it.

Because love shouldn't feel like emotional hostage negotiations.

Healthy people don't need to control you to love you.

They don't need to win every argument.

They don't rewrite history every time accountability knocks on the door.

And they certainly don't expect you to lose yourself just so they can feel important.

Here's your reminder:

You don't owe anyone unlimited access to your peace simply because they share your last name, your history, or your heart.

Boundaries aren't cruel.

They're the security system for your sanity.

And if someone gets angry every time you set one...

You just discovered exactly why you needed it.

So read the list.

Learn the patterns.

Trust your gut.

Then go pour yourself a dirty martini, hug your dog, and remember...

The healthiest relationship you'll ever have starts the day you stop auditioning for a role in someone else's chaos.


πŸ’¬ Let's Talk:
Which "commandment" have you seen the most in real life? Was it the constant need to be right, the blame game, or the exhausting need to always be the center of attention? Share your thoughts—your story might help someone else realize they're not imagining the pattern.

Some People Aren't Just Red Flags... They're the Entire Parade

 


Let's clear something up before the comment section grabs its pitchforks...

Not every selfish person is a narcissist.

Not every liar is a psychopath.

Not every ex deserves a psychological diagnosis... even if they did deserve a one-way ticket to another planet.

But...

Have you ever met someone who seemed to be a strange mix of charming, manipulative, emotionally cold, impulsive, and somehow always left a trail of broken people behind them?

Yeah...

Those are the people who make you Google things at 2:00 a.m.

"So... what is wrong with this person?"

Here's where it gets interesting.

People love throwing around the words psychopath and sociopath like they're personality types, but they're not actual medical diagnoses. They're terms commonly used to describe different patterns of traits that often fall under Antisocial Personality Disorder (ASPD).

Think of it this way...

A person with more psychopathic traits often plays chess.

A person with more sociopathic traits often plays dodgeball... with other people's emotions.

One tends to be cool, calculated, charming, and strategic.

The other tends to be impulsive, explosive, reckless, and unpredictable.

And then...

There are people who seem to have a little of Column A and a little of Column B.

Lucky us.

These people can charm the room, manipulate the situation, lie without blinking, lack empathy, refuse accountability, and somehow convince everyone else they're the victim.

It's almost impressive.

If it weren't so exhausting.

Here's the important part:

Your job isn't to diagnose people.

Your job is to recognize unhealthy patterns.

Do they repeatedly manipulate?

Do they lack genuine remorse?

Do they use people instead of loving them?

Do you constantly feel confused, anxious, guilty, or like you're losing yourself?

Those answers matter far more than whether someone technically fits a label.

Because whether someone is a narcissist, has antisocial traits, or is simply a chronic jerk with excellent PR...

The result for you can be exactly the same:

You lose your peace.

So stop spending years trying to figure out why they keep hurting you.

Start asking yourself why you keep giving them front-row seats to your life.

Sometimes closure isn't a diagnosis.

Sometimes closure is a boundary.

And trust me...

Peace is a whole lot quieter than trying to win an argument with someone who has no interest in reality.

If This Description Has a Pulse in Your Memory... We Need to Talk

 


You know what's wild?

Some people can charm the waitress, hug the neighbor, crack jokes with complete strangers... then go home and emotionally body-slam the people who love them most.

Make it make sense.

You read that list and suddenly your brain starts flipping through old memories like Netflix asking, "Are you still watching?"

  • Everything revolves around them.
  • They never admit they're wrong.
  • Somehow every argument becomes your fault.
  • They're sweet in public, but a completely different human behind closed doors.
  • Image matters more than integrity.
  • Your feelings? Conveniently optional.

And if you're over there whispering, "Well... crap..."—you're not alone.

Here's the thing...

Everyone can be selfish sometimes. Everyone has bad days. Everyone can act like a jerk once in a while.

That's called being human.

A narcissist doesn't just have narcissistic moments.

It's a consistent pattern.

The rules change depending on what's best for them. Accountability is allergic to them. Empathy only shows up when it benefits them. And somehow... they always manage to become the victim after hurting someone else.

It's honestly impressive.

If emotional gymnastics were an Olympic sport, they'd be bringing home gold.

The hardest part?

They usually don't look like the villain.

They're often funny.
Successful.
Helpful.
Charismatic.
Generous... when people are watching.

That's why so many people think, "Maybe it's me."

Spoiler alert:

Healthy people don't spend years convincing you that your reality isn't real.

A healthy relationship shouldn't feel like you're constantly preparing for a performance review.

You shouldn't have to rehearse conversations in the shower hoping to avoid another explosion.

You shouldn't feel guilty for having needs.

You shouldn't apologize just to keep the peace when you didn't start the war.

And here's my favorite reminder...

Someone calling you "too sensitive" after they repeatedly hurt you doesn't make you too sensitive.

It usually means your boundaries are inconvenient.

Ouch.

If this quote reminded you of someone, don't use it as a license to diagnose everyone with a pulse.

Use it as an invitation to pay attention to patterns instead of promises.

Because words are cheap.

Consistency is expensive.

And eventually, people always show you who they are.

Believe the pattern—not the apology tour.

Now excuse me while I go sip my iced coffee and continue minding my business... a skill narcissists have never quite mastered.

The Woman Who Isn't Afraid to Eat Dinner Alone Is the One You Can't Manipulate

 


The Woman Who Isn't Afraid to Eat Dinner Alone Is the One You Can't Manipulate

There comes a point in a woman's life when being alone stops feeling like a punishment... and starts feeling like a luxury.

Read that again.

Because somewhere along the way, she discovered something that nobody tells you when you're growing up: peace is addictive.

Not the fake kind of peace where you're pretending everything's fine while your nervous system is filing complaints with Human Resources.

I mean real peace.

The kind where your phone isn't giving you anxiety.
The kind where you're not decoding one-word texts like you're auditioning for the FBI.
The kind where nobody has you wondering, "Wait... are we good?"

Friend...

If I have to wonder where I stand, I'm grabbing a lawn chair because apparently I'm standing in the wrong place.

Here's the thing.

Some people honestly believe silence is a weapon.

They disappear for three days, pop back up with a "Hey, stranger πŸ˜‰," and expect you to act like they just returned from rescuing puppies during a natural disaster.

Sir...

You were gone for 72 hours, not three tours overseas.

Calm yourself.

That's not mystery.

That's poor communication wearing cheap cologne.

Healthy women don't panic over inconsistency anymore.

We take notes.

Your behavior is data.

Every delayed response isn't automatically a red flag—people have jobs, kids, lives, and sometimes they simply need space. But when inconsistency becomes a pattern? That's different.

Patterns don't lie.

Excuses usually do.

One of the greatest gifts a woman can give herself is learning the difference between someone who's genuinely busy... and someone who's only available when it's convenient.

Spoiler alert:

If someone can scroll social media for two hours but can't send a thirty-second text...

They're communicating.

Just not with words.

And here's where it gets a little savage...

Some people think they're competing with another man.

Honey...

You're competing with uninterrupted sleep.

You're competing with a Saturday morning coffee that doesn't come with confusion.

You're competing with laughing until my stomach hurts with my girlfriends.

You're competing with my dog greeting me like I just won the lottery every single day.

You're competing with a life that became really, really peaceful after I stopped accepting emotional breadcrumbs.

That's a tough competitor.

Because once you've experienced peace, chaos starts looking incredibly unattractive.

The older I get, the less impressed I am by potential.

Potential doesn't build trust.

Potential doesn't communicate.

Potential doesn't show up consistently.

Potential is that clearance aisle item you keep saying you're going to fix someday.

Reality is what actually matters.

I don't date projects.

I'm not accepting applications for "Future Boyfriend If He Eventually Gets His Life Together."

I'm fresh out of construction permits.

Here's something I've learned the hard way...

People will call you "too much" the minute you stop accepting "too little."

Funny how that works.

You're "intimidating" because you ask for consistency.

You're "difficult" because you expect honesty.

You're "high maintenance" because you prefer communication over confusion.

Translation?

They wanted access without accountability.

Hard pass.

Now, before somebody jumps into the comments with, "Not all men..."

You're right.

Not all men.

And thank God for that.

There are incredible men who lead with integrity, communicate clearly, and make you feel emotionally safe instead of emotionally seasick.

This isn't about bashing men.

It's about refusing to normalize behavior that keeps people emotionally exhausted.

There's a difference.

The strongest women I know aren't the loudest.

They're not posting dramatic breakup quotes every Tuesday.

They're not trying to prove they're unbothered.

They're simply... at peace.

And that's what makes them nearly impossible to manipulate.

Because you can't threaten someone with loneliness when they've learned to enjoy their own company.

You can't use inconsistency as leverage against someone who values stability more than attention.

And you certainly can't breadcrumb someone who's already sitting down to a full-course meal of self-respect.

Here's the beautiful part.

Walking away doesn't always mean you stopped caring.

Sometimes it means you finally started caring about yourself.

That's not bitterness.

That's growth.

That's wisdom earned through tears, disappointment, late-night overthinking, and finally deciding your nervous system deserves better.

So if someone disappears?

Wish them well.

If someone plays games?

Let them win their prize.

By themselves.

Protect your peace like it's the last slice of cheesecake at the family reunion.

Not everyone deserves access to it.

Because the right people won't make you question your worth.

They won't make consistency feel like a special occasion.

They won't leave you wondering whether you're asking for too much.

They'll make healthy feel... normal.

And honestly?

Normal is looking pretty sexy these days.

❤️ Final Thought

Never let someone convince you that your standards are the problem when their effort is.

The woman who has learned to enjoy her own company isn't hard to love.

She's just impossible to manipulate.

And there is a world of difference.

Now if you'll excuse me...

I've got a peaceful evening, a comfy couch, snacks that won't gaslight me, and absolutely no interest in chasing someone who can't match the energy I bring to the table.

Cheers to protecting your peace.

It's still the best relationship you'll ever invest in.

Sorry About the Mean Thing I Said... When I Was Right

 

There should probably be a support group for people whose delivery needs work... but whose receipts are immaculate.

Hi. We'd bring snacks.

Look, being right doesn't automatically make us righteous. Ouch. I know. I felt that one too.

Sometimes we get so caught up in proving our point that we forget the point isn't to win the argument—it's to protect the relationship. And if we're being honest, some of us have a mouth that gets to the finish line before our wisdom even puts on its running shoes.

"Sorry about the mean thing I said when I was right."

It's funny because... well... we've all met that person.

Some of us are that person.

Now before anyone starts clutching their pearls and typing, "Jesus wouldn't say that," let's remember something:

Jesus absolutely spoke the truth.

He just didn't weaponize it to feed His ego.

Ephesians 4:15 reminds us to "speak the truth in love." Notice it doesn't say, "Speak the truth with a side of emotional damage."

Truth without love becomes a wrecking ball.

Love without truth becomes people-pleasing.

God calls us to both.

Now... let's also not pretend there aren't moments when people mistake honesty for meanness simply because they didn't like hearing it.

That's not your responsibility.

Not everyone who gets offended is being wronged.

Sometimes they're just being corrected.

There's a difference.

Here's the challenge:

Before you clap back with that perfectly crafted comeback that's been simmering in your brain for three hours, ask yourself:

  • Am I trying to help... or just trying to humble someone?
  • Is this for God's glory... or my satisfaction?
  • Will this create peace... or just create screenshots?

Because let's face it...

Winning an argument while losing your peace is a pretty lousy trade.

And yes... there are still people who deserve boundaries instead of explanations.

There are still moments when silence is the most savage response in the room.

There are still people who need accountability.

Just remember...

You can have discernment without being cruel.

You can be bold without being bitter.

You can be right without making someone feel small.

Well...

Most days.

Some days the Holy Spirit has to tackle us before our mouth gets there.

Growth is a process.

Grace is available.

And if you happen to accidentally season your truth with a little too much jalapeΓ±o?

Own it.

Apologize.

Learn.

Then keep speaking the truth—with just enough kindness that people remember the message longer than the delivery.

Because being right is satisfying...

But being Christ-like? That's the real flex. πŸ™πŸ˜Ž

Breaking News: I Checked My Calendar... and Tomorrow Is Fully Booked with "Not My Problem."

 





"I just checked my calendar. I won't give a fuck tomorrow either."

Honestly? That's not an attitude problem. That's what happens when you've spent way too many years volunteering to carry everyone else's emotional baggage like you're running a free airport shuttle.

At some point, you realize:

  • Every crisis isn't your emergency.
  • Every opinion doesn't deserve your energy.
  • Every text doesn't require an immediate response.
  • And every grown adult can survive the consequences of their own decisions.

Revolutionary, I know.

Some people will call it selfish.

Funny... those are usually the same people who benefited when you never had boundaries.

Here's the plot twist: Protecting your peace isn't cold. It's called emotional budgeting. If your battery is sitting at 3%, maybe stop handing out chargers to people who keep unplugging yours.

So tomorrow?
I'm still going to be kind.
I'm still going to care.
I'm still going to help where it matters.

I'm just no longer accepting applications for the position of unpaid therapist, professional people-pleaser, or full-time fixer of self-inflicted disasters.

My calendar is finally reserved for peace, laughter, coffee, healing... and minding the business that actually pays my bills.

If that disappoints someone...

Well...

I already checked tomorrow's schedule. πŸ˜‰