Being an Empath: A Blessing, a Curse, and Occasionally a Loud Situation

“Being an empath means I can feel your energy shift before you even decide to shift it. Don’t act surprised when I respond like I already read the whole plot twist.”

-This Puzzled Life

 Light the charcoal. Sprinkle the sage. It’s my way of announcing to the universe, and anybody else listening, that the energy is about to be corrected. Redirected. Or escorted out. It’s not decoration. It’s a declaration. The vibes will behave. Or they will be removed.

Let me go on and say this before somebody gets the wrong idea and starts assigning me spiritual homework that I did not sign up for. Being an empath does not mean I’m a soft‑spoken emotional Roomba gliding around the house sucking up everybody’s mess in silence. No ma’am. No sir. No spirit.

I am an empath with range. I can read your tone, micro‑tone, micro‑aggression, and the ghost of the tone you almost used. And if my intuition taps me on the shoulder and whispers, “They tried you,” I will absolutely raise my voice like a Southern Baptist who just found out somebody parked in her spot at church.

Empath does not mean quiet. Empath means I know exactly why I’m yelling. People love to romanticize empaths like we’re walking mood rings with good credit. But the truth is more complicated. Being an empath is a blessing because you can walk into a room and instantly know who’s lying. Who’s tired. Who’s two seconds from crying. Who’s pretending to be fine. Who’s about to start some mess. Who needs a hug. Who needs a boundary. And who needs to be escorted out by security.

But it’s also a curse. You can’t turn it off. You can’t unfeel what you felt. You can’t unsee the emotional weather patterns swirling around people like spiritual Doppler radar. And sometimes you’re sitting there thinking, “Lord, why did you give me this gift without a mute button?”

Let’s tell the truth that makes people uncomfortable. Some empaths aren’t born. They’re forged. Some of us learned to read a room because we had to. Because survival depended on knowing when the energy shifted.

When someone’s mood changed. When danger was coming. When silence meant safety. And when footsteps meant run. That kind of childhood intuition doesn’t disappear. It grows up with you. It becomes a skill, a shield, a superpower and sometimes a burden you didn’t ask for.

So yes, some empaths are spiritually gifted. And some of us are trauma‑trained emotional detectives with a sixth sense and a therapist on speed dial. Being an empath means you don’t just enter a room. You scan it. You feel the tension in the air before anyone speaks. You clock the fake smile from across the room. You sense the passive‑aggressive energy floating near the snack table. You know who’s genuinely happy to see you. And who’s performing hospitality like it’s community theater. It’s not paranoia. It’s pattern recognition.

And while everyone else is like, “Oh, the vibe seems fine.” You’re standing there like, “No it doesn’t. Somebody in here is lying. And somebody else is about to cry.” Boundaries aren’t optional for empaths. They are survival gear. Without boundaries, an empath will drown in other people’s emotions like they’re swimming in a pool they didn’t even want to get in.

Boundaries are how we protect our peace, our energy, our intuition, our sanity, our inner child, our outer adult, and the version of us that still wants to believe people mean well. People who don’t understand boundaries think they’re rude. People who need your boundaries think they’re personal attacks. But people who love you will understand that boundaries are how you stay alive, present, and emotionally available without burning yourself to ash.

Let me be extremely clear in a way that even the spiritually hard‑of‑hearing can understand. When an empath sets a boundary, it is not a suggestion, a preference, or a cute little decorative fence. It is survival architecture.

Empaths don’t set boundaries casually. We set boundaries because we’ve already scanned the emotional terrain. We’ve already clocked the patterns. We’ve already felt the shift in your tone. And we’ve already sensed the storm clouds gathering behind your smile.

When someone violates a boundary we clearly communicated, it doesn’t feel like a misunderstanding. It feels like a threat. It feels like disrespect. It feels like someone walked into our house. Ignored the “Please remove your shoes” sign. And tracked mud across the ancestral rug. And because empaths are wired to detect danger that is emotional, spiritual, and energetic, boundary violations hit us like alarms going off in a building we didn’t even want to be in.

This is why people get confused when an empath goes from calm to “Oh absolutely not” in 0.3 seconds. They think we’re overreacting. But what they don’t understand is we saw the intention. We felt the entitlement. We recognized the pattern. And we sensed the disrespect before it fully formed.

By the time we raise our voice, the situation has already been analyzed. Processed. And spiritually notarized. Empaths don’t explode out of nowhere. We respond to the data. Violating a boundary is the emotional equivalent of someone looking us dead in the eye and saying, “I don’t respect your peace, your intuition, or your humanity.” At that point, the empath is not being dramatic. The empath is being accurate.

When I say I’m an empath, people assume I’m out here collecting gold stars from the universe. And waiting for someone to pat me on the head and say, “Good job for feeling things deeply. Absolutely not. I don’t need outside validation because I validate myself loudly, confidently, and with the full support of my intuition, my ancestors, and my own emotional PhD.

I spent too many years being trained to read every room, every tone, every shift in energy just to survive. So, trust me when I say, I know what I feel. I know why I feel it. And I don’t need a committee meeting to confirm it. My inner knowing is the authority. My boundaries are the policy. And my self‑validation is the final stamp of approval. Anyone else’s opinion is optional, decorative, and often late to the truth I already knew.

The next time somebody hears “empath” and assumes I’m a gentle emotional cloud floating through life, let me correct the record. I’m not floating. I’m detecting. I’m reading the room, the subtext, the spiritual Wi‑Fi, and the emotional weather report. And if the forecast says, “disrespect with a 70% chance of foolishness,” trust and believe I will bring the thunder. Empathy doesn’t make me silent. And sometimes accuracy requires volume. Thanks for reading! And go with your gut. Because it’s the most accurate feeling that you can feel.

Affirmation: I honor my intuition. Protect my peace. And raise my voice only when spiritually necessary. Which, unfortunately for some folks, is more often than they’d prefer.

***Don’t forget to watch the video!***

#ThisPuzzledLife

Self‑Care: Because My Cats Are Tired of Babysitting My Burnout

“I’m not tired. I’m Southern‑tired. Which means my soul needs a nap. My spirit needs a snack. And my cats need me to stop acting like I’m immortal.”

-This Puzzled Life

Light the charcoal. Sprinkle the sage. Let the ancestors clock in for their shift. Today’s energy walked in here barefoot. Tracking mud across my spirit. And my Southern cats have already filed a complaint. Listen. If self‑care were a Southern woman, she’d be standing on your porch right now. Her hands on hips. Church finger raised saying, “Baby, you look tired. Not regular tired. The kind of tired where even your shadow needs to sit down.”

Let me tell you something right now. Self‑care is not optional. Self‑care is not a luxury. Self‑care is not “I’ll get to it after I finish these 47 tasks and emotionally babysit three grown adults.” Self‑care is a requirement like sweet tea at a funeral. Or humidity in July. And if you don’t believe me, that’s fine. The cats do. And they’ve unionized. The cats are inside holding a family meeting about your wellbeing like, “Bless her heart. She tried to drink coffee for hydration again.”

This is not a drill. This is a wellness emergency. This is FEMA‑level fatigue with a side of “I’ll rest when I’m dead.” And the cats have decided they will NOT be attending your funeral if you don’t get it together. Piper has already drafted a strongly worded letter to the universe. Coco is practicing her disappointed stare in the mirror. And Tinkerbell is pacing like she’s preparing to deliver a eulogy she absolutely does not have time for. They’re unified. They’re fed up. And they’ve declared you a Code Red Hot Mess until further notice.

Piper is perched on the counter like a tiny porch‑sitting auntie whispering, “Baby, cleanse this house before the chaos gets ideas.” Coco is circling my feet like she’s smudging the perimeter with her attitude alone. And Tinkerbell has taken her position by the window. And she’s staring into the horizon like she’s negotiating with forces I can’t see. We reclaim the room, the mood, and the moment. Negative energy gather your belongings and exit like you were raised right.

It started last Tuesday when I sat down on the couch. I was exhausted. And holding a cup of coffee that tasted like it had given up on life. Piper hopped up beside me, stared directly into my soul, and said (in fluent Southern telepathy),“Ma’am. When was the last time you drank water?”

Coco strutted in behind her like a wellness coach who charges $300 an hour and doesn’t take insurance. “And when,” she added, “was the last time you sat down without clenching your jaw like you’re trying to crack a pecan with your molars?” Tinkerbell didn’t say a word. She just placed one paw on my knee which is the universal sign for, “Baby, you’re running on fumes and spite.”

People hear “self‑care” and think it means a spa day, a $90 candle, or a bath bomb that promises enlightenment. But real self‑care is things like drinking water before your kidneys file a complaint. Saying “no” without writing a three‑paragraph apology. Resting because your body is not a rental car. Eating something green that didn’t come from a gummy bear. And getting enough rest so that your mind and body has time to digest what’s going on throughout our nation. It’s the quiet, unglamorous maintenance that keeps you from turning into a feral possum in a Dollar General parking lot.

Getting enough rest is not optional. It’s the bare‑minimum maintenance required to keep you from turning into a sleep‑deprived cryptid haunting your own kitchen. Your body is not a 24‑hour Waffle House. And yet you keep acting like folks can wander in at any hour demanding emotional hash browns “scattered, smothered, and covered.” Meanwhile, your Southern cats are watching you shuffle around the house like a ghost who missed their exit to the afterlife.

Piper keeps blinking slow like she’s trying to Morse‑code “go lay down.” Coco has already dragged a blanket onto the couch in protest. Tinkerbell is perched on the armrest while giving you that look that says, “If you don’t rest voluntarily, we will stage a wellness coup.” Rest is not laziness. Rest is strategy. Rest is how you keep your spirit from filing for divorce.

Piper naps 19 hours a day and feels no shame. Coco refuses to let anyone touch her unless she specifically requests it. Tinkerbell meditates by staring at the wall like she’s communing with the ancestors. These cats have boundaries so strong they could stop a hurricane. And here I am, letting people text me “hey u up?” at 6 AM like I’m a Waffle House.

Down South self‑care also means ignoring your phone like it’s a bill collector. Sitting on the porch and letting the breeze baptize you. Lighting a candle and telling the ancestors, “Handle it. I’m tired.” And eating a biscuit because joy is medicinal. And yes, sometimes it means telling your entire family, “I love y’all. But I’m off duty today. Please direct all emotional emergencies to Jesus or the group chat.”

Piper says, “Hydrate or diedrate.” Tinkerbell says, “Rest is resistance.” And Coco says, “If you don’t take care of yourself, I will sit on your chest until you do.” Honestly, that last one felt like both a threat and a blessing. You deserve rest. You deserve softness. You deserve to take care of yourself without guilt gnawing at your ankles. Self‑care is not selfish. Self‑care is how you stay alive. Stay sane. And stay Southern without cussing out the entire tri‑county area. This means that I also need to do better at self-care. 

So, here’s the truth. And it’s delivered with the force of a cast‑iron skillet hitting a countertop. If you don’t start taking care of yourself, your cats will file a formal complaint with the ancestors. And they will win. Rest. Hydrate. Set boundaries. Do it like your sanity depends on it because it does. We’ve still got many months of with this horrible administration.

Now go practice some self‑care before Piper drafts a PowerPoint. Coco calls HR. And Tinkerbell summons the spirits to intervene. And that’s on sweet tea, porch swings, and minding your blessed business. Thanks for reading! And know that you’re worth it.

Affirmation: I honor my rest. Protect my peace. And let my body recharge without guilt. Because even my ancestors and my cats agree that a well‑rested me is a powerful me.

***Don’t forget to watch the video!***

#ThisPuzzledLife

Shame: The Weight I Refuse to Carry Anymore

“Shame was never my reflection. It was the shadow of someone else’s fear cast across my life.”

-This Puzzled Life

Light the charcoal. Sprinkle the sage. Let the smoke rise like a soft warning. A trembling invitation. And a doorway cracked open just wide enough for the truth to step through without flinching. Let it drift through the room the way shame once drifted through our childhood homes as quiet and unspoken. But heavy enough to shape the way we learned to breathe.

This isn’t about performance. It isn’t about survival. It’s about naming the thing that has lived in your bones longer than some people have lived in their houses. I’m not writing from a place of humor or distance. I’m writing from the wound. From the memory. From the soil that raised me. And the silence that tried to claim me.

Shame is not born in us. It is handed to us. Pressed into our palms by people who were supposed to know better. People who were supposed to love better. People who were supposed to see us as whole. And in the Deep South, shame is practically a family heirloom.

Down here, some conservative communities have perfected shame into an art form as quiet, polished, and Sunday‑morning approved. They wield it like a switch they no longer have to swing. Because the words do the bruising for them. They don’t have to raise their voices. They just raise an eyebrow. They don’t have to say you’re wrong. They just say they’re “praying for you.” They don’t have to tell you to hide. They just make sure you know what happens to people who don’t.

Shame becomes the air you breathe before you even know what air is. It teaches you to fold yourself small. To tuck away the parts of you that don’t fit the script. To apologize for the way your heart beats. The way your voice trembles. And the way your truth refuses to die quietly. The worst part is how deeply it roots itself. And how it convinces you that you are the problem. Not the rules. Not the silence. Not the fear disguised as righteousness.

Some Southern conservative spaces are experts at this. They turn difference into danger. They turn authenticity into rebellion. They turn survival into sin. They shame you for who you are. And then shame you again for hurting because of it.

But here’s the truth shame never wants you to learn. You were never the one who failed. You were the one who endured. Shame is not your inheritance. It is not your identity. It is not your burden to carry one more mile. The moment you name what was done to you. The moment you say, “This wasn’t love. This was control.” The spell breaks. The weight shifts. The air clears. And you begin to see yourself without the fog of someone else’s fear. You begin to hear your own voice again. You begin to rise. And rising is the one thing shame cannot survive.

Shame is universal. It’s a part of every culture and every nation. And every community has its own way of teaching people to hide the parts of themselves that don’t fit the script. Shame is a global language. It is spoken in different dialects. It is enforced through different rituals. And it is carried in different bodies.

But the version I know. The one that shaped my bones and rewired my voice was born in the conservative Deep South. That’s the lens I speak from. That’s the air I learned to breathe. That’s the terrain where shame wasn’t just a feeling. It was a system.

Some conservative Southern communities wield shame like a tool of order. A way to keep people in line. A way to maintain the illusion of perfection even when the truth is rotting beneath the floorboards. They don’t have to say, “you’re wrong.” They just say, “we don’t talk about that.” They don’t have to say, “you’re unworthy.” They just say, “think of what people will think.” They don’t have to say, “you don’t belong.” They just make sure you feel it.

Shame becomes the soundtrack of your childhood. The shadow in every room. The reason you learn to fold yourself into shapes that hurt to hold. When you grow up queer, outspoken, different, or simply unwilling to disappear, the shame becomes sharper. More pointed. And more personal.

You were not the problem. You were the disruption. You were the truth they didn’t know how to hold. Shame thrives in silence. But it cannot survive being named. The moment you say, “This harmed me,” the spell breaks. The moment you say, “This wasn’t love,” the weight shifts. The moment you say, “I deserved better,” the ground beneath you changes shape.

You begin to see yourself without the fog of their expectations. You begin to hear your own voice without the echo of their judgment. You begin to rise in ways they never prepared for. And rising is the one thing shame cannot withstand.

Let every culture keep the shame it created. Let the South hold the weight of the shame it taught me to carry. I am done dragging their silence behind me. I am done mistaking their fear for my fault. I am done shrinking to make their world more comfortable. I speak now. I rise now. I reclaim every part of me they tried to bury.

And the sound of that truth is unapologetic. Unbroken. And is the loudest thing I’ve ever survived. You were never meant to carry it. Set it down. Walk forward. And let the sound of your unbroken truth shake the whole damn South. Thanks for reading! And put that shame down.

Affirmation: I release every ounce of shame that was handed to me. My truth rises. My voice steadies. And I walk forward unburdened and whole.

***Don’t forget to watch the video!***

#ThisPuzzledLife

Truth Over Tradition: My Exit From Comfortable Dysfunction

“The truth didn’t break my family. The pretending did.”

-Unknown

Here’s the bigger picture. I didn’t grow up in a family that heals. Problems don’t get solved. They get buried alive. And then resurrected during holidays like emotional zombies. Now that me and my sister are adults, childhood resentments still pop up like whack‑a‑mole. And nobody wants to pick up a mallet. Let’s all smile in public so we don’t “defame the family.” Which honestly, does a fantastic job defaming itself.

And my family isn’t special. Dysfunction is everywhere. I have enough mental health education in my background to recognize the patterns. But they’ll swear I’m the problem. If you look past the church smiles, the whole system is sick. I would genuinely rather be hit by a car than attend “family time.” And because my kids were born into a lesbian family, they get treated like they came with a moral recall notice.

You can’t throw money at children and then take no active part in their lives the rest of the time. Especially, when you do the opposite with the other children in the family. The kids notice. I’ve tried talking about it for 17 years. And the truth is this. They just don’t care.

I have a master’s degree in counseling psychology. Yet somehow I’m the ignorant one. They don’t want insight. They don’t want help. They want silence. And mine has officially expired. I defend myself and my kids however I see fit. Respectfully? No. Effectively? Absolutely.

They want healing without effort. They’re emotional pillow princesses that want the benefits of growth while doing absolutely nothing but blinking dramatically. And when truth bruises their egos, accountability never shows up. Meanwhile, my dad plays messenger pigeon flying information back and forth between me and the rest of the family so that the dysfunction stays perfectly preserved.

Here’s the part they’ll never admit. Family therapy requires guts and transparency. And those two things they treat like forbidden sins. Instead, they’ve built a giant sand pile where they can bury their heads. And pretend nothing is wrong. That’s their comfort zone. Not truth. Not healing. Just sand. Neck‑deep and breathing through a straw of selective memory.

My favorite quote says it best, “If nothing changes, then nothing changes.” And I refuse to be silenced because their comfort depends on my suffering.

Our family lives in what I call comfortable dysfunction. It’s the emotional recliner they refuse to replace even though the springs are broken. And the fabric smells like denial. It’s easier than accountability. Easier than honesty. Easier than saying, “Maybe the gay daughter isn’t the downfall of civilization.”

And as if being the rainbow sheep wasn’t enough. I’m also the green sheep of the family because I’m a medical cannabis patient. And the family’s translation is that I’m “druggin’ and thuggin’.” The “bad influence.” And the “one who needs prayer.” But that’s not even the real issue.

The problem is my refusal to sit quietly in the pew of generational silence. The issue is that I no longer participate in the family’s favorite pastime of pretending. I’m done shrinking myself so other people can stay cozy in their outdated beliefs. I’m done letting conservative Christian values be weaponized against me and my children.

They can keep their selective morality. The kind where my sister thinks being gay is “wrong and evil.” But somehow premarital sex is just the Olympic sport of “being human.” Funny how sin gets flexible when it’s their behavior on the table. 

“My family says I’m ‘living in sin.’ Which is wild coming from some of them who wave a red hat like it’s the state flower. They preach about morality and still treat premarital sex, drinking, and hypocrisy like they’re covered under the ‘Jesus forgives me’ warranty.”And trust me. They act like I graffitied the Ten Commandments in rainbow glitter.

Being gay automatically made me the family’s “problem child.” Even though the real problems have nothing to do with what gender I love. And everything to do with the fact that I refuse to pretend. My sister can have premarital sex. Drink like she’s hydrating for the Olympics and drive afterward. And micromanage her child like she’s running a dictatorship. But somehow I’m the moral crisis.

Meanwhile, my sister’s shot glasses stays full. Her judgment stays loud. And her hypocrisy stays undefeated. Funny how cannabis for medical reasons is “dangerous.” But alcohol with a side of denial is “just being human.” I’m the rainbow sheep because I live authentically. I’m the green sheep because I choose a legal, doctor‑recommended treatment. And I’m the scapegoat because I refuse to shrink so other people can stay comfortable in their dysfunction. If being myself makes me the rainbow‑green hybrid sheep of the family, then so be it. At least I’m not grazing in the pasture of hypocrisy.

So no, I’m not stepping back into the box they built for me. I’m not dimming myself, so their comfort stays intact. I’m not carrying the weight of a family that refuses to lift a finger for its own healing. They can keep their comfortable dysfunction. They can keep their silence. They can keep their outdated beliefs wrapped in Bible verses that only apply to me.

Today I honor my inner rainbow‑green sheep. I’m fabulously queer. I’m medically lifted. And completely unbothered by the opinions of people who confuse hypocrisy with holiness.”

I’m choosing truth over tradition. I’m choosing growth over guilt. I’m choosing my children, my peace, and my sanity. And if my existence shakes the foundation of their worldview. Then the foundation was weak to begin with. Thanks for reading! Do you and let the others do them.

Affirmation: I bless my rainbow‑green sheep soul today queer, medicated, and thriving. While certain relatives clutch their red hats and pearls at my existence. But don’t blink twice at their own chaos, contradictions, or alcohol fueled commandments.

***Don’t forget the video!***

#ThisPuzzledLife

The Family Roles & The Circus They Created

“My family says I’m ‘living in sin.’ Which is hilarious coming from people who treat denial like a spiritual gift. And premarital sex like a community service.”

-This Puzzled Life

Light the charcoal. Sprinkle the sage. Negative energy, get your shoes on and leave. Today we’re diving into one of my favorite dysfunctional family topics. Family roles. Those unofficial job titles we never applied for. Never wanted. And yet somehow ended up performing like we were on salary. Take a moment and see where you and your people fall. And here’s the spoiler. If you’re reading this, you already know.

Before we get started, let me warn you. This is not a gentle stroll through family history. This is a full‑blown guided tour through a Southern household. That’s been held together with casserole, denial, and conservative Christian values. That seem to get applied with the accuracy of a toddler using glitter glue.

I grew up in a family where “we don’t talk about that” wasn’t a suggestion. It was the eleventh commandment. Emotions were treated like illegal fireworks. Everyone had them. Nobody handled them correctly. And something always exploded at the worst possible time.

In my house, honesty was considered aggressive. Accountability was considered disrespectful. And therapy? Therapy was treated like witchcraft performed by people who “don’t know Jesus personally.”

Meanwhile, the dysfunction strutted around the living room in broad daylight wearing a name tag and a church hat. And everyone pretended they couldn’t see it. If denial were a sport, my family would have Olympic medals and a sponsorship from Hobby Lobby.

So, buckle your emotional seatbelt. And prepare yourself. Because once you recognize the roles in a dysfunctional family. It’s like spotting roaches. You can’t unsee them. And suddenly they’re everywhere.

Family roles are the expected behaviors, responsibilities, and emotional acrobatics each person performs to keep the family circus running. These roles shift depending on culture, family size, and personality. But the classics are Hero, Scapegoat, Golden Child, Lost Child, Mascot. And I show up everywhere like glitter after a craft project.

Let’s begin.

1. The Hero (a.k.a. The Family PR Department) The Hero’s job is to make the family look normal, stable, and “blessed and highly favored” to the outside world. According to theraplatform.com (2025), they take on excessive responsibility to gain approval. This is my mother’s role. Or at least the role she auditions for. She is attention-seeking. Reputation-obsessed. And allergic to accountability. She delivers passive-aggressive comments like she’s handing out communion wafers. And then acts shocked when people get upset.

Her signature move? “The Dummy Card.” Suddenly she “doesn’t remember,” “didn’t mean it like that,” or “doesn’t know what you’re talking about.” But trust me, she knows. And right after she stirs the pot. She gives my dad the “rescue me” look. As if she didn’t just season that pot with cayenne, spite, and generational trauma. We only have real conversations when she’s mad at my sister, The Golden Child. Otherwise, it’s news, sports, and weather which is the Holy Trinity of Avoidance.


2. The Scapegoat (hi, it’s me) The Scapegoat is blamed for everything wrong in the family. Stubbed toe? My fault. Bad weather? Somehow me. The economy? Probably me too. I don’t conform to their lifestyle. I’m gay. I use medical cannabis. I don’t go to church because there are too many people who support the cruelty of the Trump regime. And align theirselves with the MAGA movement which practices a form of chriatianity that cannot be found in any Bible. And quite frankly, they have a bad reputation for normalizing pedophilia while demonizing being gay. I guess I should be glad that I just can’t understand that rationale. 

I talk about taboo topics. And I acknowledge reality instead of pretending everything is fine.
And did I mention I’m gay? Because trust me they will. Instead of saying,
“She’s our family and we love her no matter the gender of someone she loves and that loves her.” They act like my existence is a PR crisis. The attitude is like, “Remember when Dana destroyed the family by being prouid to be gay and authentic?”  I’m also the family whistleblower. I don’t play along with generational nonsense. I’m my own person. And I’m not apologizing for it.

3. The Golden Child (my sister, obviously) The Golden Child is the family’s prized possession. The chosen one. The favorite. And the one who can do no wrong even when she is actively doing wrong. Thriveworks.com (2023) describes this child as obedient, praised, and protected. That’s her. She has been dipped in gold since birth. She follows the script. Holds the same beliefs. And passes them down to her children like heirloom china. She was taught what to think. Not how to think. And the cycle continues. Children aren’t born to hate. They learn it from the adults who raise them. And this is what my sister excels at consistently.

4. The Lost Child (also my sister — she multitasks) The Lost Child avoids conflict like it’s a full-time job with benefits. She withdraws. Stays quiet. And pretends she’s above the chaos. While simultaneously contributing to it. She never acknowledges her harmful behavior. She believes most people are beneath her. And when she talks about someone being gay, she spells it out “G-A-Y” like she’s avoiding summoning a demon. Her emotional range is that of a frozen waffle. And honestly, that’s the family vibe overall.

5. The Mascot (me and my dad) Mascots use humor to distract from the dysfunction. We crack jokes. Lighten the mood. And do not dare fix anything. We just to keep the room from exploding. This doesn’t always work especially when me and my sister are at war like rainbows and bibles. My dad rescues my mom and sister from “big, bad Dana.” Who refuses to sweep things under the rug. I’m the villain because I tell the truth. Imagine that. Kind of sounds like the current government’s level of functioning.

Now you’ve met the cast and the roles they cling to like emotional security blankets. In the next part we’ll zoom out and look at the bigger picture. And it’s the part they refuse to acknowledge.

That concludes our tour of the Family Circus. Please exit through the gift shop. Where denial is half‑off. Accountability is out of stock. And the Scapegoat merchandise is mysteriously overpriced.” Thanks for reading! Keep breaking chains.

Affirmation: Today I honor my emotionally athletic self. The whistleblowing. Boundary‑setting. Truth‑telling legend who refuses to join the family’s Olympic Denial Team. Even though they’ve been training since the womb.

***Don’t forget to watch the video!***

#ThisPuzzledLife

Trauma Awareness Month: The Stories We Carry, The Healing We Claim

“Trauma doesn’t make you weak. It makes you a witness to your own survival.”

-This Puzzled Life

Light the charcoal. Sprinkle the sage. Let the smoke rise like it’s clocking in for a shift. And let the air shift like it’s bracing itself for whatever truth you’re about to drag into the daylight. Today isn’t about pretending everything’s fine or slapping a smile on top of a wound. It’s not about the vibes, snacks, or cats doing interpretive dance in the sunbeam. It’s about trauma awareness. It is about naming the things we survived. The things we carried alone. The things we laughed through so we wouldn’t crumble. It’s a Southern‑fried, emotionally honest, and funny enough to keep you from dissolving into a puddle on the kitchen floor. 

Trauma Awareness is the kind that hides in your shoulders, jaw, breath, memories, and your jokes. And if we’re going to talk about it, we’re going to do it the only way I know how. Complete with honesty, humor, and the kind of emotional courage that feels like taking your bra off after a long day. It’s painful, relieving, and absolutely necessary.

There’s a moment right before you talk about trauma where your whole spirit goes, “Are we sure we want to do this?” It’s the same tone you use when someone says, “Let’s just run into Walmart real quick.” You know it’s not going to be quick. You know you’re going to see something you can’t unsee. You know you’re going to come out changed. Talking about trauma is like that. Except instead of a man in pajama pants buying raw chicken and fireworks, it’s your nervous system holding up a sign that says, “We’ve been through some things, ma’am.”

Trauma doesn’t just show up when you’re ready. Trauma is that one cousin who arrives early. Eats all the good snacks. And then says, “Why you look stressed?” It pops up at the worst times especially when you’re trying to relax. When you’re trying to sleep. When you’re trying to enjoy a sandwich. When you’re trying to mind your business. And when you’re trying to be a functioning adult for five minutes. Trauma will tap you on the shoulder like, “Hey bestie, remember that thing from 1998? No? Well, I do.” And suddenly you’re staring at the wall like it owes you money.

Your body remembers everything. Even the stuff you tried to bury under humor, iced coffee, and pretending you’re fine. You’ll be walking through Wal-Mart. Touching a throw pillow. And your body will whisper, “Hey, remember that time?” And you’re like, “No I do not. I am touching a pillow. Let me live.” But trauma doesn’t care. Trauma is like a Southern grandmother with a memory like a steel trap. And no sense of timing.

People talk about healing like it’s a spa day. Let me tell you something. Healing is not cucumber water and a robe. Healing is crying in the shower because your shampoo smells like 2007. Healing is realizing you’ve been clenching your jaw since the Bush administration. Healing is sitting in your car after therapy like you just got hit by an emotional freight train. Healing is messy. Healing is loud. Healing is quiet. Healing is confusing. Healing is holy. Healing is exhausting. Healing is worth it. But cute? Absolutely not.

So, buckle up. Because the cats have decided it’s Trauma Awareness Hour. And apparently they’ve all been waiting their whole lives to trauma dump with the enthusiasm of a group therapy circle run by toddlers. And today is the day they ask deeply personal questions with the emotional sensitivity of a toddler holding a chainsaw. They have formed a circle. They have snacks. They have opinions. And apparently, they have questions about my trauma.

Me: “Okay, girls. Today we’re talking about trauma. Share whatever you feel comfortable with.”

She raises paw like she’s in kindergarten

Piper: “I’ll go first because my story is the most dramatic. Obviously.”

Coco: “Oh lord.”

Tinkerbell: “Let the child speak. She needs this.”

Piper: “So picture this. Me and my siblings. In a metal box. In the Mississippi heat, basically sautéing like tiny furry cornbread muffins.”

Me: “Baby, that’s awful.”

Piper: “I know. I was basically a rotisserie chicken with trauma.”

Coco: “You were a sweaty raisin with opinions.”

Piper: “Anyway, I survived because I’m dramatic and stubborn. And now every time the sunbeam hits me wrong, I flop over like a Victorian woman fainting at a garden party.”

Tinkerbell: “You faint because you forget to breathe when you get excited.”

Piper: “Trauma. Tinkerbell. Let me have this.”

Coco clears throat like she’s about to deliver a TED Talk

Coco: “My siblings and I were found under a house. A house. Do you know what lives under houses? Darkness. Ghosts. Tax evasion. I was basically a feral raccoon with trust issues.”

Me: “You’ve come so far.”

Coco: “Yes. And now I cope by judging everyone. It’s called growth.”

Piper: “You judge me the most.”

Coco: “You give me the most material.”

Tinkerbell: “I don’t remember my trauma.”

Me: “At all?”

Tinkerbell: “No. I simply chose not to be present. I was spiritually unavailable.”

Coco: “You had worms.”

Tinkerbell: “Yes, apparently my intestines were hosting a music festival.”

Piper: “You pooped like you were trying to summon something.”

Tinkerbell: “I was summoning peace. And a vet. Preferably both.”

Me: “You really don’t remember anything?”

Tinkerbell: “I remember diarrhea. And then I remember you. Everything else is optional.”

Me: “Well, we’ve all been through some things.”

Piper: “Yeah, but now we’re together! A family! With two crazy brothers who scream at dust!”

Coco: “We are a support group. A dysfunctional one, but still.”

Tinkerbell: “We heal one memory at a time. Preferably with snacks.”

Piper: “And naps!”

Coco: “And boundaries. Mostly for Piper.”

Piper: “I don’t believe in boundaries.”

Tinkerbell: “We know.”

Piper: “Sometimes I get scared when it’s hot outside. So, I cope by yelling at the sun.”

Coco: “I cope by staring at people until they feel bad.”

Tinkerbell: “I cope by leaving my body spiritually whenever something stressful happens. Like when the vacuum turns on. Or when Piper breathes too loud.”

Piper: “I have big emotions.”

Coco: “You have no volume control.”

Tinkerbell: “You have the energy of a toddler who drank a Red Bull.”

Piper: “Momma, what is your trauma about?”

Me: “Oh absolutely not. We are not opening that can of worms. We’ll be here until this time next year. And I don’t have enough snacks or emotional stamina.”

Coco: “Is that why you have panic attacks in Walmart?”

Me: “Yes.”

Tinkerbell: “But what’s scary about going to the pharmacy?”

Me: “Everything.”

Piper: “Everything?? Like the shelves? The people? The lighting?”

Me: “Yes.”

Coco: “The lighting is aggressive.”

Tinkerbell: “The vibes are hostile.”

Piper: “The blood pressure machine is a demon.”

Me: “Exactly.”

Coco: “So what did our therapist tell you?”

Me: “She said, ‘I’ll see you in another couple of days.’”

Tinkerbell: “Translation: ‘You’re a lot. But I believe in you.’”

Piper: “Translation: ‘You have so many issues we need a punch card.’”

Coco: “Translation: ‘You’re keeping the lights on in that office.’”

Me: “But look at us now. We’re safe. We’re loved. We’re healing together.”

Piper: “And we have snacks!”

Coco: “And stability.”

Tinkerbell: “And indoor plumbing.”

Me: “We survived things we never should’ve had to survive. And now we get to build something soft and silly and sacred together.”

All Three Cats: “Group hug!”

Coco: “But don’t touch me too long.”

Piper: “I’m crying!”

Tinkerbell: “I’m dissociating!”

Me: “Perfect. Exactly the emotional range I expected.”

In small Southern towns, admitting trauma is treated like a social crime. The moment you name what happened, you’re not just telling your story. You’re “disgracing the family,” “embarrassing the community,” and threatening the carefully polished illusion of stability that everyone works so hard to maintain. The culture teaches people to swallow their pain. Protect the reputation of the town at all costs. And never, under any circumstances, call out the people who caused the harm. And because the “good ole boy” network is alive and well. And sitting in every position of authority from the courthouse to the church pews, the truth gets buried right alongside the accountability. Even when the perpetrators are known. Especially when they’re known. Nothing is done. The silence is enforced. The victims are shamed. And the town keeps smiling for the church directory photo like nothing ever happened. But the truth doesn’t disappear just because the town refuses to look at it. It lingers in the air, the families, the generations, waiting for someone brave enough to break the cycle and say, “This happened. And it mattered.” And I am that one in my family who refuses to stay quiet about the trauma that happened in the small city of Petal, MS.

Trauma will have you doing things that make absolutely no sense. Things like apologizing to furniture when you bump into it. Jumping at sounds that aren’t even loud. Overthinking texts like you’re decoding ancient scripture. Saying “I’m fine” in a tone that suggests you are, in fact, not fine. And crying because someone said, “I’m proud of you.” And your body wasn’t prepared for that level of kindness. Trauma will also make you emotionally attached to random objects. A mug. A blanket. A rock you found on a walk. A pen that writes really smooth. Your brain will be like, “This is my emotional support spoon. Touch it and perish.”

Trauma awareness isn’t about reliving the pain. It’s about naming it, so it stops owning you. It’s about understanding why you react the way you do. It’s about giving yourself grace for surviving things you never should’ve had to survive. It’s about learning that your triggers aren’t flaws. They’re evidence that you lived through something real. And it’s about knowing you’re not broken.

You’re healing. You’re growing. You’re learning how to breathe again. You’re learning how to trust softness again. You’re learning how to exist without bracing for impact. That’s not weakness. That’s strength with stretch marks.

May your healing be gentle. May your memories lose their sharp edges. May your nervous system unclench one muscle at a time. May your heart learn safety. May your voice return to you. May your laughter come back louder. May your story be yours again. And not something that happened to you. But something you rose from.

So, if no one told you today. You’re not dramatic. You’re not broken. And you’re not “too much.” You’re a whole human who lived through storms that would’ve snapped lesser souls in half. And you’re still here healing. Laughing. Unlearning, Softening. Reclaiming. That’s not survival. That’s resurrection. And baby, if that isn’t holy, I don’t know what is. Drop the sage. Keep the truth. And walk away knowing this. Your story didn’t end in the dark. You did.

Affirmation:  I honor the parts of me that survived. I honor the parts of me that are still healing. I am allowed to grow, to rest, to feel, and to reclaim my peace. And I can do it one breath at a time.

***Don’t forget to watch the video!***

#ThisPuzzledLife

Dual Diagnosis Awareness: The Emotional Block Party Happening in My Frontal Lobe

“My healing isn’t linear. It’s a Southern backroad with potholes, detours, and at least one possum giving me side‑eye. But I’m still driving.”

-This Puzzled Life

Light the charcoal. Sprinkle the sage. Today we’re not just cleansing the room. We’re cleansing the entire diagnostic chart that tried to play me like a two‑for‑one special at the Discount Trauma Mart. We’re also cleansing the medical chart, the family gossip line, and the entire Southern belief system that still thinks “nerves” is a diagnosis. And “just pray on it” is a treatment plan.

Dual diagnosis is that special Southern casserole of “mental health condition” baked together with “substance use disorder.” And it’s served piping hot with a side of unsolicited advice from people who haven’t been to therapy since Clinton was in office. It’s the moment life says, “Surprise! You’re not just juggling one thing. You’re juggling two flaming batons while the universe yells, ‘Smile, sweetheart!’”

Dual diagnosis is like waking up every day in a body that’s running both a Windows 95 operating system and a bootleg Sims expansion pack that keeps crashing. It’s trying to heal your brain while your brain is actively filing HR complaints against itself. It’s the emotional equivalent of trying to fix the roof while the house is still on fire. And the HOA is sending you letters about your grass height.

And it’s that moment when life looks at you and says, “Oh, you thought you were dealing with one thing? Hold my sweet tea.” It’s the psychiatric equivalent of a potluck where anxiety brings a casserole. Depression brings a Bundt cake. And addiction shows up empty-handed but somehow leaves with all the Tupperware.

And the world? The world acts like you’re being dramatic. And the wild part? People act like you’re being dramatic. “Have you tried drinking more water?” Ma’am, I have two diagnoses doing synchronized swimming in my amygdala. Hydration is not the plot twist that’s going to fix this. “Have you tried yoga?” Ma’am, I have two diagnoses doing the electric slide in my frontal lobe. Yoga is not going to stop this internal block party. 

Beneath the jokes, dual diagnosis is real, heavy, and often misunderstood. People think it’s chaos. But it’s actually survival. It’s resilience. It’s learning to hold two truths at once like “I’m struggling and I’m still here.” It’s learning to treat yourself with compassion even when your brain is acting like a committee meeting where everyone is yelling and nobody brought notes. It’s learning to say, “I deserve care.” “I deserve treatment.” “I deserve to be taken seriously.” And most importantly, “I am not a punchline. I’m the whole damn story.”

Down here in the Deep South, dual diagnosis gets wrapped in a layer of cultural seasoning nobody asked for. Aunt Linda whispers like you’re contagious. Cousin Ray offers you a beer because “you look stressed.” And the church ladies add you to the prayer list without asking. Right under “traveling mercies” and “unspoken.” Meanwhile, you’re just trying to survive the day without your brain throwing a surprise block party.

Dual diagnosis in the South also means navigating stigma with the grace of a cat on a freshly mopped floor. You’re trying to get help. Half the town thinks therapy is witchcraft. And the other half thinks medication is a moral failing. Meanwhile, you’re over here doing the emotional equivalent of rebuilding a transmission with a butter knife and a YouTube tutorial.

Dual diagnosis awareness is about reclaiming your narrative from the people who oversimplify it. Misunderstand it. Or try to shame you for it. It’s about saying, “Yes, I’m dealing with two things at once. And I’m still out here living. Healing. And occasionally thriving like the chaotic miracle I am.” And yet, here we are. Still showing up. Still healing. Still lighting the charcoal and sprinkling the sage like we’re about to summon the ancestors and the insurance company.

Dual diagnosis doesn’t make you broken. It makes you bilingual in battles most people will never understand. And if anyone tries to minimize your experience? Tell them this, “Baby, I’m not dealing with too much. You’re just underestimating my capacity.” Thanks for reading! And keep searching for answers.

Affirmation: I honor every part of my journey. The messy, the miraculous, and the medically complicated. All of it proves I’m stronger than the storms I’ve survived.

***Don’t forget to watch the video!***

#ThisPuzzledLife

Addiction Awareness: The Lover That Cuts Deep and Comes for Everything

“Addiction is a quiet predator. It’s patient. Calculated. Always hungry. And waiting for the moment you’re weakest to take the biggest bite out of your life.”

-This Puzzled Life

 Light the charcoal. Sprinkle the sage. Because when we talk about addiction awareness, the air needs to be thick with truth, protection, and the kind of courage that makes your voice shake but keeps going anyway. This isn’t a pretty conversation. It’s not a gentle unveiling. It’s not polite. It’s not something you whisper behind closed doors like a family secret wrapped in shame. It’s the kind of truth that shakes the floorboards and rattles the bones of anyone who’s ever lived it. Loved someone through it. Or buried someone because of it. This is a front porch, bare soul, trembling‑hands kind of truth. And today, we’re telling it out loud.

Addiction doesn’t walk into a home quietly. It barges in like a storm. It tracks mud across every memory. It rearranges the furniture of your life. And convinces you that chaos is normal. It teaches you to apologize for things you didn’t break. To shrink yourself so its shadow can stretch across the room. And to pretend you’re fine when your insides feel like shattered glass. And the cruelest part? Addiction doesn’t just take from the person struggling. It takes from everyone who loves them.

Families learn to tiptoe. Children learn to decode moods like weather patterns. Partners learn to carry burdens that were never meant for one set of shoulders. And the person battling addiction, learns to hide their pain behind a smile that fools everyone except the people who know them best. Addiction awareness isn’t about statistics or slogans. It’s about the people who wake up every day fighting a war no one else can see.

There are the battles fought in bathrooms, parked cars, and bedrooms with the door locked. The battles fought in silence because shame is louder than the truth. The battles fought by people who are terrified to ask for help because they don’t want to be judged. Dismissed. Or treated like a problem instead of a person.

Addiction awareness means saying, “You are not alone. You are not broken beyond repair. You are not the worst thing you’ve ever done.” It means recognizing that recovery isn’t linear. It’s messy. It’s painful. It’s full of relapses, restarts, and revelations. But it is possible. I tasted that freedom many years ago, during a moment in life that now seems like it never existed. 

Let’s talk about the people that love them too. The ones who hold the line when the person they love can’t. The ones who pray. Cry. Scream. Hope. And repeat. Addiction awareness means honoring their resilience. Their heartbreak. Their bravery. Loving someone through addiction is its own kind of battle that deserves to be seen.

Addiction is not a moral failure. It is not a character flaw. It is not a sign of weakness. It’s a neurological hijacking. And once it gets inside, it takes the controls and refuses to give them back. It’s a thief. A liar. And a weight that no one should carry alone.

Awareness is the first step toward compassion. Compassion is the first step toward healing. Healing is the first step toward freedom. And freedom? Freedom is the birthright of every single person touched by addiction. It doesn’t matter whether they’re fighting it. Surviving it. Or loving someone through it.

I have been an addict in one form or another since I was a very young teen. That’s the part people don’t see. The way it starts before you even understand what “coping” means. Before your brain is fully formed. Before you know that one decision can echo for decades. Some things I let go of and never touched again. But others? Others I’m still married to. Still controlled by. And still waking up beside like a partner I never meant to vow my life to. I’ve stood on every side of this issue. I’ve been a patient, professional, survivor, and witness. I’ve buried friends and family. And I’ve found the bodies of patients. I’ve even sat in classrooms learning the science. And I’ve sat on bathroom floors learning the consequences. 

One of the biggest debates is whether addiction is a disease. And honestly? I see both sides. But I can attest to this. What I know in my bones is that addiction will pick up exactly where it left off. It doesn’t forget you. It doesn’t forgive you. And it doesn’t loosen its grip just because you got tired.

It progresses like a slow-moving fire. Consuming everything until it shuts down every functioning cell in your body. It’s the lover that kisses your forehead while holding a knife behind your back. And it’s like trying to pet a rattlesnake and hoping it suddenly cares about your well-being.

There are no social crack users. No social heroin users. No social meth, fentanyl, or “just once in a while” users of the things that hollow you out from the inside. I’ve known too many who didn’t make it. Too many funerals. Too many empty chairs. Too many stories cut short. And the truth is brutal. Addicts are not the type who typically live to be 80. The statistics confirm what our hearts already know. That many have died. And many more will die.

And process addictions? Eating disorders, self-harm, gambling, sex addiction, etc. are not softer versions. They are simply different roads to the same grave. Addiction doesn’t care about the method. It cares about the destruction. And it will be done in totality emotionally, socially, spiritually, and physically.

It strips you down until you’re a shell of what once resembled a human being. It destroys your life and the lives orbiting yours. That’s the goal. It wants no interference. And no one slowing its roll. It wants you wrapped around its finger in a relationship so co-dependent it feels cellular. It doesn’t care how many relationships are ruined as a result. Addiction is about the next fix. Whatever that fix is. And you will chase it until the line between living and dying blurs. 

The saddest part is that you don’t know you’re susceptible until you’re already in it. Addiction does not discriminate. It shows no mercy to clergy, billionaires, politicians, Hollywood actors, musicians, doctors, lawyers, nurses, or the people just trying to keep the lights on and food on the table.

And the idea that you can outthink addiction? Outsmart the chemical, emotional, and neurological machinery it hijacks? That’s the thinking of fools. And I say that with compassion. Not judgment. There is nothing more heartbreaking than watching someone, yourself included, need their “drug” so badly that they would burn down every good thing in their life for another taste of something that is killing them.

Let the truth rise with the smoke. Addiction is not romance. It is not rebellion. It is not escape. It is suicide on an installment plan. And for every person who struggles, it has a bullet with their name on it. Even mine. Speaking the truth out loud is how we start breaking the cycle that wants us silent. Awareness is the first crack of light. Awareness is the first act of rebellion. Awareness is the first step toward choosing life. Even when the addiction whispers otherwise. It’s a story of survival in a world that doesn’t teach us how to hold our pain. 

Your days of hiding in silence are over. We’re speaking your name. Shine light in your corners. And refusing to let shame be your shield. This is awareness. This is courage. This is the moment we stop whispering and start healing. And it’s for every soul who deserves a life bigger than their battle. Thanks for reading! And ask for what you need.

Affirmation: I honor the battles I’ve survived, and I refuse to let the shadows that once claimed me write the rest of my story. I rise with clarity, courage, and a spine made of truth.

***Don’t forget to watch the video!***

#ThisPuzzledLife

The Raccoon Tallywacker Scandal That Ruined My Road Trip

“If the government starts labeling raccoon parts, it’s time to reevaluate the whole system.”

-This Puzzled Life

Light the charcoal. Apparently we’re grilling up another round of American foolishness. And this time it’s so unhinged it made me, a woman who enjoys poking fun at the current administration as a form of cardio. dissociate so hard I briefly left my body. Consulted my ancestors. And came back needing another therapy session and a cold compress.

I mean, I’ve roasted this administration before. I’ve seasoned them like Sunday chicken. I’ve vented, ranted, cackled, and written whole blog posts powered solely by spite and sweet tea. But this latest “news report” involving a high‑ranking official, a raccoon, and the alleged removal of said raccoon’s gentlemanly region for “study,” had me blinking like a possum in a flashlight beam.

My ancestors, the whole committee, materialized around me like, “Baby, what in the backwoods biology class is happening up there in Washington?” And honestly? I didn’t have an answer. I was too busy trying to remember my name, my location, and why the government is so chronically preoccupied with anything south of a creature’s ribcage.

Listen. I was minding my business. Sipping my gas‑station Diet Coke on a family road trip through the scenic wasteland between “Are we there yet?” and “If you touch your brother one more time I’m pulling this car over,” when the internet decided to fling a headline at me so deranged it made my ancestors sit up in their graves like, “Now what in the possum‑blessed hell is this?!”

Apparently, and I say this with the full weight of Southern disbelief, a high‑ranking government official has been reported to have removed a raccoon’s gentleman’s handle and taken it home “for study.” 

And I’m sitting there in the driver’s seat. Clutching my chest like a Pentecostal auntie catching the Holy Ghost. And wondering why this administration is so chronically preoccupied with genitals. Human genitals. Animal genitals. Hypothetical genitals. Imagined genitals. Genitals in theory, practice, and lab‑grade Tupperware. Meanwhile, the rest of us are just trying to get to Buc‑ee’s before the boy’s mutiny.

So, there we are, rolling down I‑59, when my phone lights up with yet another “breaking news” alert about this alleged raccoon situation. And every time I try to read it aloud, the universe punishes me by making the boys argue louder. But I persevere. Because I am a Southern woman and therefore built for chaos.

The article claims, with the confidence of a man who’s never been told no. This unnamed official allegedly removed the raccoon’s pork sword and tucked it into a cooler like it was leftover potato salad. Then, apparently, he took the raccoon’s ding‑dang doodle home “for research,” which is the kind of phrase that should automatically trigger a wellness check.

I’m sorry, but what kind of research? Peer‑reviewed? Government‑funded? DIY backyard biology? A PowerPoint titled “Raccoon Rods: A Retrospective”? And why, why, why, is this administration so obsessed with woodland critter anatomy? We’ve got potholes big enough to swallow a Kia Soul. But somebody’s out here collecting raccoon tallywackers like Pokémon.

At one point, my youngest son, who has been silently judging the entire situation from the backseat, leans forward and says, “Momma, I don’t know what’s going on in Washington. But if they’re cutting off raccoon toololly on purpose, that’s a sign the Lord is coming back soon.” I agreed. And then I look in my rearview mirror, and both boys are Googling “raccoon privates” on my hotspot. Which means I’m going to be on an FBI watchlist by sundown.

And the article just keeps escalating. Apparently the raccoon’s love baton was placed in a labeled baggie. A LABELED. BAGGIE. Sir, if you have a filing system for raccoon reproductive memorabilia, I need you to step away from public office and into therapy.

When we finally got home, I sat my cats down for a family meeting. Here is the transcript because trauma shared is trauma halved.

Me: “Alright, children. Gather round. Mama has something to tell you. And I need everyone emotionally regulated before I begin.”

Piper: “If this is about the vacuum cleaner again, I already told you I thought it was attacking us first.”

Me: “No, baby. This is worse. There’s been another situation in our government. A raccoon‑related situation. A gentleman‑region situation.”

Coco: “Momma, did somebody steal that raccoon’s downstairs department?”

Me: “Allegedly. And then allegedly took it home. For ‘study.’”

Tinkerbell: “I have lived through many things. Worms. Diarrhea. The betrayal of canned food that promised gravy but delivered lies. But this. This is new.”

Piper: “Hold on. Hold on. A human took a raccoon’s personal peener portfolio and brought it home like a souvenir from Bass Pro Shop?”

Me: “That’s what the article said.”

Coco: “Momma, I’m gonna be real with you. That sounds like the plot of a horror movie where the villain wears cargo shorts.”

Tinkerbell: “My ancestors are whispering. They say, ‘Child, this is why we stayed in the sunbeam and minded our business.’”

Me: “Mine too, baby. Mine too. When I read it, I dissociated so hard I floated above the car like a helium balloon tied to generational trauma.”

Piper: “Okay but why? Why would anyone do that. Why would anyone look at a raccoon and think, ‘You know what I need? That.’”

Me: “Apparently for research.”

Coco: “Research into what? Raccoon romance? Forest fertility? The aerodynamic properties of woodland dignity?”

Tinkerbell: “Perhaps they were trying to understand the mysteries of nature. Or perhaps they were simply unwell.”

Piper: “Momma, if a human ever comes near ME with a cooler and a label maker, I’m calling 911 myself.”

Me: “Same, baby.”

Coco: “I shall meditate on this. But first, I require a treat. Trauma makes me hungry.” 

Tinkerbell: “I’m just saying. If the government is out here collecting raccoon accessories, we need to start locking the doors earlier.”

Me: “Honestly? Same.”

Piper: “Momma, I need to call the therapist again.”

Me: “Baby, you just talked to her last week.”

Piper: “Well, I need another session. A deep one. EMDR.Eye‑Movement‑Desensitization‑and‑Raccoon‑related trauma. I need the little finger‑wiggle thing. I need the beepy headphones. I need the full package.”

Coco: “Girl, you need a punch card at this point.”

Tinkerbell: “I support her healing journey. But also, I would like a snack.”

Me: “Children. I cannot afford for all of us to be in therapy at the same time. My insomnia already has insomnia. My anxiety has a side hustle. My nervous system is running Windows 95.”

Piper: “Well maybe if the government stopped doing raccoon science projects, we could all sleep.”

Coco: “Facts.”

Tinkerbell: “I shall add this to my journal.”

By the time we reached the state line, I had accepted four things.

  1. This country is spiritually unwell.
  2. Rabies could potentially be spread in more than one way.
  3. No one in power should be allowed near a raccoon unsupervised.
  4. If one more news alert mentions a woodland critter’s “equipment,” I’m moving to a swamp and starting over.

I mean it. I’ll become a barefoot bayou oracle. I’ll read fortunes in crawfish shells. I’ll speak only in riddles and weather predictions. I’ll never again hear the phrase “raccoon meat whistle” and that will be a blessing unto my soul.

But until that day comes, I will simply say this. If your administration is spending more time on critter crotches than on infrastructure, healthcare, or literally anything else, maybe just maybe, it’s time to log off. Step outside. And touch some grass that does not belong to a raccoon missing his twig‑and‑berries. Amen and pass the cornbread. Thanks for reading! Keep laughing through this administrative pain. America, please log off. What do you think about this story involving raccoon peener collecting?

Affirmation: I release all chaos that is not mine. Including but not limited to raccoon anatomy, government foolishness, and family‑road‑trip nonsense. I remain grounded. Hilarious. And unbothered.

***Don’t forget to watch the video!***

#ThisPuzzledLife

You Can’t Pray the Gay Away, But You Sure Can Expose the Hypocrisy: A Southern Queer Survival Guide

“If your faith requires someone else to suffer, it’s not holy. It’s just dressed‑up cruelty.”

-This Puzzled Life

Light the charcoal. Apparently the courts woke up. Stretched. Sipped their Folgers and said, “Hmm. What if we brought back psychological torture today?” And the conservative Christians said, “YAY! Revival!” Meanwhile, every queer person in the South is standing on their porch like, “Lord, give me strength, patience, and a Xanax the size of a biscuit.”

Down here in Mississippi, we know hypocrisy like we know humidity. It clings. It suffocates. It ruins your hair and your spirit at the same time. And nothing brings out the hypocrisy quite like a ruling that says, “Sure, go ahead and traumatize queer people in the name of Jesus. He won’t mind.” These folks will tell you with a straight face that they’re doing this out of “love.” If that’s love, then I’m a straight man named Bubba who drives a lifted truck and says “bro” every six seconds.

Let’s be honest. This ruling isn’t about saving souls. It’s about controlling bodies. It’s about punishing difference. It’s about making queer people small enough to fit inside their narrow theology and even narrower worldview. And the wildest part? These are the same people who can’t keep their own households together. The same people who preach “traditional marriage” while living like a deleted storyline from a messy reality show. The same people who scream “protect the children!” While ignoring the actual dangers children face like abuse, exploitation, and the youth pastor who keeps volunteering for overnight trips.

But sure. Let’s focus on the gays. Because we’re clearly the problem. Not the pastors who keep getting “relocated.” Not the lawmakers who can’t keep their pants zipped. Not the “family values” influencers who spend more time in hotel rooms than in prayer.

Let me break it down in terms even a conservative uncle can understand. You cannot convert someone out of being gay. You cannot shame someone out of being gay. You cannot therapy someone out of being gay. You cannot “deliverance session” someone out of being gay. Unless the only thing you’re delivering is trauma.

If sexuality were a choice, don’t you think I would’ve chosen something easier? Something with less paperwork? Something that didn’t require me to explain myself at every family gathering like I’m giving a TED Talk in a Cracker Barrel? But no. God made me like this. Curved, colorful, and incapable of pretending otherwise.

You could dangle 45 sets of dangly bits in front of me like a clearance sale at Spencer’s Gifts and I still wouldn’t be straight. But put me in front of some boobs and a cooter cat and suddenly I’m glowing like a porch light in July. That’s not a choice. That’s not a phase. That’s not a “lifestyle.” That’s divine architecture.

If you want to stay in the closet because it feels safer, I get it. But don’t pretend it’s holiness. Don’t pretend it’s righteousness. Don’t pretend it’s “God’s plan.” It’s fear. And fear is the currency of conservative Christianity. I sprinted out of the closet like it was on fire. And I’ve been free ever since. Even with my own family members who weaponize scripture like it’s a Nerf gun filled with shame. I send that mess right back to sender with a smile and a boundary. Chosen family is where the love lives. Chosen family is where the truth lives. Chosen family is where the rainbow was always meant to shine.

Theo rainbow is divine reassurance. It’s God saying, “Relax. I made y’all fabulous on purpose.” No court ruling can change that. No pastor can change that. No conversion therapist with a clipboard and a superiority complex can change that. We are here. We are queer. We are not going anywhere. And we are not apologizing for existing.

So let the smoke rise like a prayer the evangelicals forgot to proofread. Stand tall in your queerness like a magnolia tree that refuses to bow to the storm. Because here’s the truth they don’t want to face. Every time they try to erase us. We multiply. Every time they try to shame us. We shine harder. Every time they try to legislate us out of existence. We become louder, brighter, and more unbothered than ever.

Their hypocrisy is loud. But our joy is louder. Their cruelty is sharp. But our resilience is sharper. Their fear is deep. But our love is deeper. And at the end of the day, when the court rulings fade. When the sermons lose their sting. When the shame campaigns collapse under their own weight. We will still be here laughing. Loving. Living. Thriving. Dancing in the rainbow God hung in the sky as a reminder that storms don’t last forever.

So let them clutch their pearls. Let them scream about “family values.” Let them pretend their closets don’t have motion‑activated lights. We know the truth. You damn sure cannot stop the rainbow from rising. Mic dropped. Floor cracked. Hypocrisy exposed. Amen and pass the sweet tea. Thanks for reading! And Happy Pride year-round. What are your thoughts on this type of ruling?

Affirmation: “My identity is divine. My joy is sacred. And no court, church, or closet can dim the rainbow God put in my soul.”

***Don’t forget to watch the video!!!

#ThisPuzzledLife