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. Especially, when you do the opposite with the other grandchildren. The kids notice. I’ve tried talking about it for years. And the truth is this. They 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 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 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

Budtender Moment: Banana Revenge Strain Review

“They criminalized the plant and monetized the trauma.”

-Unknown

Light the charcoal. Sprinkle the sage. Negative energy go away. Today, I want to tell you about a refreshing strain called Banana’s Revenge.

Banana Revenge is a sativa-dominant strain. It is a cross between Apples & Bananas x Pablo’s Revenge. Apples & Bananas is a cross between Platinum Cookies x Grandaddy Purple x Blue Power x Gelati. Pablo’s Revenge is a cross of Animal Mints x Sherbet Cake. It has a very fruity taste profile. It’s an enjoyable strain for daytime use. And it has enough indica influence to make sure you don’t have the jitters that some sativas are known to cause.

Top terpenes in this strain are Limonene, Caryophyllene, Pinene, and Myrcene. Patients report medical benefits with mood swings, anxiety, stress, focus, creativity, and mild pain relief. Please keep in mind that each grow will be different and the flower effects, terpenes and genetics will differ depending on which region of the country that the plant is grown. Thanks for reading! Keep blazin.’

Affirmation: I choose what supports my well-being.

***Don’t forget to watch 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

To the Mothers Who Raised My Soul: A Southern Testimony for Mother’s Day

“Some mothers grow you, some guide you, and some resurrect the parts of you that never had a chance to live.”

-This Puzzled Life

 Light the charcoal. We’re about to cook up a truth that’ll smoke out every memory, ache, and blessing you’ve ever collected from the women who raised you. Whether they meant to or not.

Some mothers come into your life the traditional way. The diaper‑changing. Bottle‑warming. “Lord‑give‑me-strength” kind of mothers. The ones who knew your baby smell before you knew your own name. They wiped your tears, your nose, and occasionally your entire behind with the same rag. Because that’s just what survival looked like on a Tuesday.

Then there are the distant maternal figures. The ones who hover like porch‑light moths. They don’t tuck you in. But they keep an eye out. They’re the women who say things like, “You doing alright?” In a tone that somehow feels like a weighted blanket. They don’t step in. They don’t step away either. They’re the quiet guardians of your emotional perimeter.

And then. There are the rare ones. The naturally maternal souls who walk through this world radiating comfort like a heated church pew in July. They don’t have to try. They don’t have to earn it. They just are. These are the Yoda Mothers. The mystical, wise, soft‑spoken warriors who teach you the life lessons you somehow missed while you were busy surviving your childhood. They’re the ones who accept you for who you are instead of who you were supposed to be. The ones who don’t flinch at your chaos. The ones who don’t shrink from your truth. The ones who make you feel safe just by existing in the same room. Breathing the same air. Humming the same off‑key hymn.

And maybe that’s the wildest part of all this. How motherhood isn’t a single recipe. But a whole damn potluck. Some women bring casseroles of comfort. Some bring boundaries disguised as burnt cornbread. Some bring wisdom so sharp it slices you clean open. Women bring nothing but their presence. And somehow that’s enough to keep you breathing.

The truth is that the mothers who change your diapers and warm your bottles give you a beginning. The distant maternal figures give you perspective. But the Yoda Mothers. The soul‑raising. Spirit lifting, “sit down, let me tell you something real” women. They give you a home you didn’t even know you were missing. 

These women are diamonds. Not the kind you find in a jewelry case. But the kind the universe hides until the stars finally align and God says, “Alright, you’ve struggled long enough. Here’s someone who won’t break you.” 

They’re the ones who look at your mess and don’t flinch. The ones who hear your truth and don’t run. The ones who see the parts of you that were never nurtured. Never named. Never held. And they hold them anyway. They don’t mother you out of obligation. They mother you out of instinct. They mother you because something in their spirit recognizes something in yours and says, “Oh. There you are. Come sit by me.”

And when life pulls them away. When distance stretches thin or Heaven gets greedy. The absence hits like a spiritual amputation. Parts of you go quiet. Parts of you go cold. Parts of you start to decay in ways you don’t talk about out loud. Because losing a mother‑figure like that isn’t just grief. It’s losing the one person who made you feel like your soul had a place to land.

But here’s the miracle. Their love doesn’t leave. Their lessons don’t fade. Their fingerprints stay pressed into your spirit like God Himself signed off on your survival. Here’s to every kind of mother. The ones who birthed you. The ones who raised you. The ones who found you. And the ones who resurrected you without ever asking for credit.

So, here’s to the diaper changers. The distant watchers. The accidental Yodas. And the soul‑raising diamonds Heaven hand‑delivers when you need them most. If you’ve ever been loved by a mother like that, in blood or in spirit, then you already know. Some women don’t just mother you. They resurrect you.

 Here’s to the women who became safe harbor in a world full of storms. The ones who could calm your whole nervous system just by walking into the room. Here’s to the diamonds Heaven hides until you’re finally ready to be loved right. The ones who show up exactly when your spirit is starving for gentleness, truth, and a place to land.

 Here’s to the mothers who didn’t just show up. They transformed you. They stitched you back together with wisdom you didn’t know you were missing. They held the parts of you that were never held. They loved the parts of you that were never loved. They saw the parts of you that were never seen.

 And if you’ve ever been blessed enough to be mothered by a woman like that, then you already know the truth carved into your bones. Some mothers don’t just shape your life. They save your soul. And that’s a legacy no absence, no distance, no silence, and no grief can ever erase. Thanks for reading! And Happy Mother’s Day!

Affirmation: I honor every woman who mothered me in ways my spirit needed. I am worthy of the love, safety, and acceptance they poured into me. And I carry their wisdom like a lantern lighting every step forward.

***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

Budtender Moment: Mexican Flan Strain Review

“Mexican Flan hit me so smooth I thought a mariachi band was warming up in my kitchen just to escort my stress out the door.”

 — Coco, Unofficial Cinco de Mayo Snack Coordinator

Light the candles. Hide the good tequila from your cousins. And tell Piper to stop sticking her entire head in the condensed milk. Today’s Budtender Moment is a Cinco de Mayo dessert‑themed blessing. We’re talking Mexican Flan, the strain that tastes like someone’s abuela finally said, “Sí, cariño, you’ve earned a second slice.” Tap the bowl three times. Bless the kitchen table. Whisper, “Let sweetness guide me,” as you spark it.

Mexican Flan doesn’t just hit. It comforts. This is the strain that shows up wearing a festive apron, carrying a warm plate, and saying, “Sit down, sweetheart. You’ve been wrestling life like it owes you money. Let Flan take over.” It’s creamy. It’s calming. It’s the emotional dessert course your nervous system has been begging for. And in true Cinco de Mayo fashion, it reminds you that cultures blending together is a kind of magic. The kind that tastes like cinnamon, caramel, and community.

Mexican Flan is typically a balanced hybrid. It’s a cross between Mochi × Dosidos. Mochi is a cross between Gelato #47 or Mochi Gelato. Do-si-dos is a cross between Girl Scout Cookies (GSC) × Face Off OG. Some growers say that it leans slightly indica. Which makes sense, because this strain absolutely tucks you in like you’re the favorite child. Genetics vary, but most versions come from dessert‑leaning hybrids with sweet, custard‑soft terpene profiles. Other growers and dispensaries also list a phenotype called Mexican Flan bred from Ice Cream Cake × Animal Mints. Together, they create a strain that feels like a dessert cart rolling straight into your bloodstream. Mexican Flan is more than a strain. It’s a reminder that cultures mixing makes life richer.

Top terpenes in this strain are Limonene, Myrcene, Caryophyllene, and Linalool. Southern kitchens and Mexican kitchens both know the power of feeding people you love, seasoning with your whole soul, and telling stories over dessert. This strain sits right at that intersection. And it’s where flavors, traditions, and people blend into something sweeter than the sum of its parts. It’s a little Southern hospitality, a little Mexican heritage, and a whole lot of “we’re better when we share the table.”

Patients report Mexican Flan is loved for getting relief from, stress, low mood, emotional fatigue, social anxiety, and that “I swear if one more thing happens today…” feeling. It’s the perfect strain for anyone who wants to relax, laugh, and feel like a hug from someone who smells like vanilla, cinnamon, and good decisions. Mexican Flan is the Cinco de Mayo strain for anyone who needs comfort, sweetness, and a reminder that cultures blending together is one of life’s greatest joys. 

Please keep in mind that each grow will be different and the flower’s effects will differ depending on which region of the country that the plant is grown. Thanks for reading! Keep blazin.’

Affirmation: I welcome sweetness, connection, and comfort into my day.

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

#Thispuzzledlife

Queso, Chaos, and Cats Who Don’t Pay Rent

“Some days I’m the charcoal, some days I’m the spark. But either way, I’m the one lighting up my own joy.”

-This Puzzled Life

Light the charcoal. Cinco de Mayo at my house does not start with calm music and a polite breeze. No, ma’am. It starts with Piper, Coco, and Tinkerbell forming a three‑cat mariachi militia and declaring your living room an independent nation called El Chaótico Sur. And it is about to ignite like Piper discovering an unattended rotisserie chicken.

You know it’s serious when all three of your cats assemble like a furry Avengers team. Except instead of saving the world, they’re here to destroy your living room, your dignity, and any hope you had of hosting a normal Cinco de Mayo celebration.

Piper’s already pacing like the general of the Fiesta Forces. Coco’s licking the air like she’s pre-gaming the queso. And Tinkerbell? She’s in the corner sharpening her claws on something important. Probably your soul.

Cinco de Mayo hasn’t even started yet. And you’re already outnumbered. Outmaneuvered. And out cheesed.

The moment that first flame pops, Piper struts onto the patio like she’s the official grill inspector sent by the State of Mississippi. Tail high. Eyes narrowed. Full authority. Zero training. She circles the grill like she’s checking for code violations. And then looks at you like, “Ma’am, this charcoal is not up to Cinco de Mayo standards. I’m calling the county.”

Meanwhile, Coco is behind her already licking the air like she’s trying to taste the smoke before it even settles. And Tinkerbell is under the table, plotting something. She always is. I hung a cute little piñata shaped like a chili pepper. I thought it would be festive. But my cats thought it was an act of war. Piper launched herself at it like she was reenacting a scene from Mission: Impawsible. Coco delivered one single, devastating paw jab that cracked it open like a safe. And Tinkerbell climbed the curtains. Rappelled down. And finished the job with the precision of a tiny, furry Navy SEAL. Treats rained from the sky like a snack-based miracle. Piper immediately declared herself “La Presidenta.”

I set up a beautiful taco bar. I arranged the toppings. I warmed the tortillas. And I felt proud. Your cats saw a lawless frontier. Coco dragged off a tortilla like she was smuggling contraband across the border. Piper stuck her entire head into the sour cream and emerged looking like a ghost who died from dairy related crimes. And Tinkerbell rolled in the shredded cheese like she was baptizing herself in the name of the queso, the crema, and the holy guacamole. By the time I turned around, it looked like a raccoon family reunion had taken place on your counter.

I put on a festive playlist. My cats heard the trumpets and immediately assumed that the house was under attack. Maybe a rival cat cartel was sending coded messages. Or it was time for the nightly NASCAR sprint from the hallway to the kitchen. Tinkerbell took the lead. Piper drafted behind her. Coco spun out on the rug. And I made myself a cute little Cinco de Mayo mocktail.

Piper dipped her paw in my drink. Sniffed it. And made a face like you’d offered her a bill from the IRS. Coco tried to knock it over just to test gravity. Tinkerbell sat nearby judging everyone like the HOA president of Chaos Court. I bought tiny sombreros. And I thought they’d be adorable. But my cats thought I’d lost my mind. Piper wore hers for 0.7 seconds. Coco wore hers proudly like a tiny sheriff patrolling the queso frontier. And Tinkerbell shredded hers. And then sat on the remains like a war trophy.

They would like to issue the following official statements.

  • Piper: “Next year, I want my own grill.”
  • Coco: “More cheese. No negotiations.”
  • Tinkerbell: “The sombrero deserved what it got.”

And me? I survived another holiday with your feline fiesta squad. Bless your Southern heart and the ability to laugh through the chaos. And that is how Cinco de Mayo turned into Cinco de Mayhem.

A holiday now officially sponsored by shredded cheese, broken piñatas, and the emotional resilience of one Southern woman who just wanted tacos. Piper has claimed the grill. Coco has claimed the tortillas. Tinkerbell has claimed your sanity. So go on and light the charcoal again next year. Your cats are already planning the sequel. Fiesta over. Queso spilled. Thanks for reading! Ola!

Affirmation: I honor my chaos, my softness, and my power. I move through this world like I belong in every room I enter. 
Because I do.

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

#ThisPuzzledLife

Anxiety Awareness: The Day My Nervous System Tried to File an HR Complaint Against Walmart

“Anxiety tried to schedule a meeting with me today, but I declined because I was already overbooked with minding my business and avoiding Walmart.”

-This Puzzled Life

Light the charcoal. Sprinkle the sage. Today we are not just cleansing the room. We are cleansing the entire nervous system that has been acting like a raccoon on Red Bull since 1986. If we’re going to talk about anxiety awareness, we might as well sanctify the whole atmosphere before my nervous system starts acting like it’s auditioning for The Exorcist: Southern Edition. Also, somebody please hold my sweet tea. And hide my debit card. Because my anxiety just whispered, “Let’s go to Walmart.” That is how generational trauma gets activated. And it just tried to file a noise complaint against my own heartbeat.

Let me tell you something. Anxiety is the only condition that will have you sitting in your own house. And minding your own business when suddenly your brain goes, “Hey, remember that embarrassing thing you did in 4th grade?” And now you’re sweating like you’re on trial for a crime you didn’t commit but might have thought about once.

Anxiety is a full-time employee in my life. No PTO. No sick days. No boundaries. It clocks in before I wake up and clocks out after I fall asleep. Sometimes it leaves sticky notes on my dreams like, “We need to talk.” And don’t get me started on the physical symptoms. Anxiety will have you convinced you’re dying because your left eyebrow twitched. Meanwhile your ancestors are watching from the spirit realm like, “Baby, that’s just dehydration and poor life consequences.”

And the worst part? Anxiety loves to show up at the most inconvenient times. Like a Southern auntie who pops up unannounced but brings no food. You ever try to relax? Just sit down. Breathe. And maybe watch a little TV? Anxiety busts through the door like, “Oh you thought. Let’s review every possible failure you’ve ever had.”

But here’s the thing. Awareness doesn’t mean we’re broken. It means we’re paying attention. It means we’re learning the choreography of our own nervous system. Even if the choreography looks like a baby deer on ice. It means we’re naming the thing so it can’t sneak up on us like a possum in the trash can at 2 a.m. And it means we’re not alone. Not in Mississippi. Not in the South. Not in this chaotic, holy, hilarious human experience.

But the real comedy? The way anxiety tries to prepare you for every possible scenario like a doomsday prepper with a Pinterest board. It is the only condition that will have you standing in the cereal aisle. Staring at 47 versions of Cheerios. And sweating like you’re defusing a bomb. Meanwhile your brain is like.

  • “What if you pick the wrong cereal?”
  • “What if everyone is watching you pick the wrong cereal?”
  • “What if you pass out in front of the cereal and become a local Facebook post?” 
  • Going to the grocery store? “What if you forget how to walk?”
  • Sending an email? “What if you accidentally confess to a felony?”
  • Meeting new people? “What if they can hear your thoughts and your thoughts are stupid?”

And that’s exactly when my cats, my emotional support staff and furry chaos consultants, decide to hold a household emergency meeting.

Piper (dramatic and convinced she’s the CEO): “Alright team, Mama’s going to Walmart. That’s a Code Orange. Everyone stay sharp.”

Tinkerbell (the eldest acting, the union rep, wearing imaginary glasses): “Should we call the therapist now or wait until she hits the checkout line and forgets her PIN again?”

Coco (the chaotic neutral gremlin): “I say we call the therapist the moment she steps into the parking lot. Walmart energy is unpredictable. Anything can happen. A rollback could roll back her entire sense of stability.”

Piper: “Coco, we can’t call the therapist every time Mama goes to Walmart.”

Coco: “Why not? She said to reach out when things feel overwhelming. Walmart is overwhelming. The lighting alone is a threat.”

Tinkerbell: “Plus, Mama always ends up in that aisle with the seasonal décor. And that’s when she starts questioning her entire life path. That’s textbook panic adjacent.”

Piper: “Okay, fine. But we need a plan. If Mama starts breathing like she’s running from a ghost, we call the therapist. If she starts sweating like she’s in a revival tent, we call the therapist. If she starts talking to herself-”

Coco: “Piper, she talks to herself every day.”

Piper: “Right. So, if she starts talking to herself louder than usual.”

Tinkerbell: “And if she buys anything from the middle aisle that she didn’t come for. That’s a red flag.”

Coco: “Like the time she went for milk and came home with a new bong?”

Piper: “Exactly. That was a cry for help.”

Tinkerbell: “Okay, so we’re agreed. Our therapist is on standby. Paws on deck. And if Mama ends up in the candle aisle sniffing things like she’s trying to inhale peace directly into her bloodstream, we intervene.”

Coco: “I’ll bring the emotional support snacks.”

Piper: “I’ll bring the drama.”

Tinkerbell: “I’ll bring the clipboard.”

And let the record show, anxiety may roll up on us like a tornado siren at 3 a.m. But we are not facing it alone. Not in this house. Not in this lifetime. Not with three cats who treat mental health like a full‑time group project.

Anxiety awareness isn’t about pretending we’re calm. It’s about knowing the signs. Naming the chaos. And having a furry emergency response team ready to call the therapist before you even realize you’re spiraling.

It’s about honoring the truth that Walmart is a battlefield. The fluorescent lights are the enemy. And the seasonal aisle is a spiritual test. It’s about laughing at the absurdity of it all. Not because it’s small, but because we’re bigger. And it’s about remembering this. You can have anxiety. You can have panic attacks. You can have days where your brain feels like a raccoon in a Dollar General dumpster. But you also have resilience. You have humor. You have sage, charcoal, and a whole household of four‑legged emotional support supervisors who refuse to let you fall apart alone.

So let anxiety know loudly, proudly, with your whole Southern chest, “I may panic in Walmart. But I do not panic alone. I come with a team. I come with a plan. And I come with three cats who will call my therapist before my knees even start to wobble. Anxiety dismissed with Southern hospitality and a side‑eye. Thanks for reading! And reach out when needed.

Affirmation: I am calm. Collected. And spiritually moisturized. And if my anxiety disagrees, it can take a number and wait behind the cats, the ancestors, and my iced coffee.

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

#ThisPuzzledLife

Mental Health Awareness Month: A Southern Survival Guide for an Unwell Nation

“My mental health is held together by therapy, hydration, and three cats who refuse to let me spiral in peace.”

-This Puzzled Life

Light the charcoal. It’s Mental Health Awareness Month. And the collective mental state of this country is giving ‘a church van with three bald tires and a prayer.” The nation’s mental health is hanging on by a thread, a prayer, and a prescription refill reminder.

And let’s be honest. This crisis didn’t start at the bottom. No ma’am. We’ve got a mental‑health crisis starting at the top. And it’s dripping like a busted AC unit in August. Our leadership is acting like a Facebook comment section that’s surrounded by red‑hat followers cheering like it’s a halftime show. They treat conspiracy theories like gospel. And emotional regulation as a foreign language.

Meanwhile, my cats have entered the chat. Nothing says “mental health check‑in” like three judgmental felines watching the country unravel while demanding snacks. My cats have already staged an intervention.

Piper lit the sage herself. Coco is pacing like she’s waiting on election results. And Tinkerbell is under the couch. Because she said the national energy feels “crunchy.” She sits like a therapist who’s out of network. And blinking slowly at the news like, “This is why y’all need boundaries.” She watches the red‑hat crowd on TV and immediately starts grooming herself. Because she knows you can’t let that kind of energy stick to your fur.

Coco has diagnosed the nation with “Too Much Foolishness Disorder.” Her treatment plan includes knocking pens off the table. Screaming at 3 a.m. And sitting directly on your chest until you confront your feelings. She sees the state of the country and says, “Oh, we’re all unwell? Bet.” Then she sprints down the hallway like she’s reenacting the national mood.

Piper is the emotional support animal who needs emotional support. She watches the president on TV. Tilts her head and walks away like, “I don’t know what that is. But it’s not stable.” Then she curls up in your lap. Even she knows the collective anxiety is loud.

In May, we gather as a nation to say, “Let’s take care of our minds.” And every May the nation responds, “Absolutely. Right after I argue with strangers online about things I don’t understand.” Therapists are tired. Teachers are tired. Nurses are tired. Your cats are tired. You are tired. The ancestors are tired. Even the houseplants are like, “Girl, water me and breathe.”

Down Here in the South we’re doing our best. We’re lighting candles. We’re praying. We’re drinking water. We’re trying to heal generational trauma. While also trying to find the good scissors.

The collective Southern mental state is basically, “I’m fine.” Translation is that I have cried in the laundry room twice today. And if one more person asks me what’s for dinner, I’m moving into the woods.” Piper nods. Coco screams. Tinkerbell knocks something off the counter. It’s a family effort.

What do we do? We breathe. We hydrate. We take our meds. We go to therapy. We stop arguing with people who think facts are optional. We light the charcoal and let the sage smoke carry away the foolishness. And we listen to the cats. They’ve been trying to tell us, “Rest is resistance. Snacks are medicine. Boundaries are holy.”If we’re going to survive this era with its chaos, noise, and its red‑hat circus energy, we’re going to need hydration, humor, therapy, and at least one cat supervising our coping mechanisms. This country needs therapy, hydration, and a nap that lasts until at least 2028.

Piper has officially closed her laptop and declared she’s unavailable for further foolishness. And has already clocked out and put her paw over the “Do Not Disturb” sign. Coco is stress eating treats like she’s watching a season finale. And she is filing paperwork with HR titled “The Nation Is Acting Up Again.” Tinkerbell has curled up on my chest because she said, “the nation’s anxiety is too loud and she’s clocking out.” And has declared the vibes unconstitutional and gone to bed. 

If the world insists on acting unwell, then we’ll heal anyway. Loudly, joyfully, and with three cats as our emotional support security detail. Bless your boundaries, your brain cells, and your blood pressure. Now go forth and protect your peace like it’s the last biscuit at Sunday dinner. Thanks for reading! Get your ass in therapy.

Affirmation: I honor my mind, protect my peace, and set boundaries so firm even Coco won’t cross them.

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

#ThisPuzzledLife