“Some days my mental health is held together by snacks, spite, and the sheer terror of having to explain myself to another human being. And honestly, that’s more stability than most systems offer.”
-This Puzzled Life
Light the charcoal. Sprinkle the sage. Let the ancestors clock in because I’m about to say something that requires spiritual PPE. Welcome back where the tea is hot. The coping skills are lukewarm. And the bar for institutional competence is lying somewhere under my therapist’s couch next to a rogue fidget cube and three generations of dust bunnies.
That’s the only proper way to open Things I Trust More Than the Current Administration: Mental Health Edition. The moment I even think about federal decision‑making and mental‑health infrastructure in the same sentence, my spirit guides start passing around clipboards like, “Everybody hydrate, this one’s gonna be long.” The energy gets so chaotic my coping skills start unionizing. My weighted blanket files a grievance. Even my therapist’s office plant, dead since the Bush administration, leans in like, “Girl, you good?”
And yet here we are. Gathered in this sacred digital sanctuary. Ready to name every ridiculous, raggedy, unexpectedly reliable thing that still manages to show up for my mental health more consistently than the systems allegedly designed to support it. Pull up a chair. Grab your emotional support beverage. And let’s begin this wellness séance.

Let me tell you something right now. As a lifelong member of the “I’ve been in therapy long enough to qualify for tenure” community, I have developed a sixth sense for nonsense. I can smell chaos before it even clocks in for its shift. I can hear a red flag rustling in the wind like a Confederate reenactor’s polyester uniform. And I can taste when a system is about to disappoint me.
If surviving American bureaucracy has taught me anything. It’s that my mental health journey has been held together with prayer, Post‑its, and the sheer willpower of every exhausted clinician who has ever said, “Let’s circle back to that. “And yet, even that feels sturdier than whatever the federal decision‑making process is doing right now.
Pull up a chair. Grab your emotional support beverage. And let’s talk about all the things big, small, and unhinged that I trust more than the folks allegedly steering this ship.
1. The coping skills handout they gave me in 2009 that said, “Try breathing.”
If breathing was going to fix my life, it would’ve done it by now. But you know what? That little laminated sheet has never lied to me, ghosted me, or changed its story mid-sentence. It just sits there, quietly suggesting oxygen like a supportive aunt.
2. The hospital blanket that feels like it was woven from recycled Brillo pads.
Scratchy? Yes. Comforting? Weirdly, yes. And it’s more reliable than any federal plan I’ve seen in the last decade? Tragically, yes again.
3. The therapy office plant that has been dead since Obama’s first term.
That plant has seen things. That plant has heard things. And that plant has never once pretended it was going to “circle back.”
4. The group therapy participant who always says, “I’m not sure if this is relevant,” and then drops the most relevant thing anyone has ever said.
That person is the backbone of America. That person deserves a medal, a parade, and a lifetime supply of fidget toys.
5. The antidepressant that took six weeks to kick in and then said, “I’ll give you 12%.”
Twelve percent is still more than I’ve gotten from some institutions. Twelve percent is practically a stimulus package.
6. The crisis hotline hold music.
Is it soothing? No. Is it confusing? Yes. Does it at least show up? Also, yes. That’s more than I can say for some systems allegedly designed to “serve the people.”
7. The therapist who says, “Let’s unpack that,” knowing full well we’re about to open a suitcase from 1997.
Do I trust them? Absolutely. Do I trust the government to fund mental health care with the same enthusiasm? Let me just go ahead and laugh in Southern.
8. The mood tracker app that keeps asking if I’m “thriving.”
No, sweetheart. But I appreciate your optimism. And optimism is more than I’ve been handed by certain national infrastructures.
9. The weighted blanket that feels like it’s trying to smother me into emotional stability.
At least it’s trying.
10. My own intrusive thoughts.
Say what you want about them, but they’re consistent. They show up on time. And they don’t pivot their messaging halfway through the fiscal year.
And that concludes today’s testimony from the Church of High Copays and Low Patience. May your paperwork be accepted on the first try. May your therapist stay in‑network forever. And may your coping skills rise up like a well‑funded program. Because we all know the actual programs won’t.
May your coping skills be sturdy. Your boundaries be fortified. And your therapy bills be mysteriously covered by a benevolent universe. May every system that claims to care about mental health actually prove it with funding, access, and compassion. And may you always trust yourself more than any institution that has ever made you fill out the same form 14 times. The real administration is the one inside your head. And that cabinet meeting is already wild enough.
At the end of the day, my ragtag mental‑health toolkit with half vibes, and half stubbornness still shows up with more reliability than any administration that can’t streamline a single form. I’ll keep trusting my weighted blanket. I trust any system that doesn’t need three committees and a prayer to approve a budget. Even my intrusive thoughts have a better attendance record than the folks running the show. Amen, Ashe, and may the next fiscal year treat us better than the last. That’s the real plot twist I’m praying for.
Affirmation: I am doing the absolute most with the absolute least. And I’m still managing to shine.
***Don’t forget to watch the video!***
#ThisPuzzledLife
