The Great Depression‑Core Easter Egg Hunt of 2026

“If Jesus can roll away a stone. My cats can certainly chase one.”

-This Puzzled Life

Light the charcoal. Sprinkle the sage. Today’s blog is about the first annual, recession‑sponsored, driveway‑rock Easter egg hunt starring my three cats  Piper, Tinkerbell, and Coco. Each of whom has the confidence of a toddler in a Batman cape. And the budget of a 1930s dust‑bowl farmer.

And trust me, we need the charcoal and the sage. Today’s story requires spiritual reinforcement. Ancestral backup. And maybe a small loan from the universe. We are gathered here not just to celebrate Easter. But to honor a sacred family tradition known as the annual Easter egg hunt that gets cheaper. Stranger. And more geologically focused every single year.

Once upon a time, when eggs were merely expensive instead of mythical artifacts guarded by dragons, we used actual eggs. Then the economy said, “Let’s make this interesting.” And last year we were forced to paint tiny red potatoes like we were running a Depression‑era art camp for feral children. But this year? Oh, this year the economy said, “I’m about to humble you.” Eggs? Absolutely not. Potatoes? Out of budget. Plastic eggs? Only if we sell a kidney.

So now we’re out in the driveway gathering rocks like we’re preparing for a biblical stoning. But we’re making it festive. The cats are dressed like they’re starring in a low‑budget Easter musical directed entirely by chaos. They are ready. They are dramatic. They are overdressed for a driveway geology project.

Welcome to the First Annual Rock‑Based Easter Egg Hunt. Where the eggs are heavy. The cats are unhinged. And the budget is nonexistent. Let us begin.

THE GREAT ROCK HUNT OF 2026

(Because eggs are $47.99 a dozen and we are not the Rockefellers.)

Let me set the scene. Last year, when the economy was only medium terrible, we painted tiny red potatoes and pretended they were Easter eggs. This year? This year the economy said, “Hold my beer.” And now we’re out in the driveway collecting rocks like we’re building a medieval wall. And the cats are dressed like they’re attending the Met Gala of Poverty.

Piper is wearing a pastel pink tutu, a sparkly bowtie, and the expression of a woman who has been personally victimized by inflation. She keeps adjusting her tutu like she’s on a runway and the judges are harsh. She also insisted on wearing bunny ears that are three sizes too big. So now she looks like a malfunctioning satellite dish.

Tinkerbell showed up in a lavender cardigan, pearls, and a tiny fascinator hat like she’s the Queen of England attending a budget Easter parade. She is not here to play. She is here to supervise. She brought a clipboard. Where she got it? I do not know. Why she has it? I absolutely know. It’s to judge us.

Coco is wearing a neon yellow vest like she’s the foreman of a construction site. She has a whistle. She keeps blowing it. No one asked her to. She also has a tiny tool belt with absolutely nothing in it except a single Temptations treat she calls “emergency rations.”

I step outside with a basket of freshly washed driveway rocks. Because we are classy. Even in ruin. And announced, “Alright ladies, the Easter Rock Hunt is officially open.”

Piper: “The economy has failed us.” 

Tinkerbell: “Focus. We need strategy.” 

Coco: blows whistle aggressively “move out.”

They scatter like furry, unhinged Marines.

Piper immediately tries to pick up a rock twice her size and screams, “I found the golden egg!” Even though it is clearly just a chunk of gravel. Tinkerbell is inspecting each rock like she’s appraising diamonds at Sotheby’s.

Tinkerbell: “This one has good structure. Excellent weight. Very egg‑adjacent.” 

Me: “It’s literally a rock.” 

Tinkerbell: “And yet it speaks to me.”

Meanwhile, Coco is rolling rocks down the driveway like she’s testing them for aerodynamics.

Coco: “This one’s too round. This one’s too flat. This one’s a weapon.” 

Me: “We’re not arming you.” 

Coco: “Then why give me a vest.”

Piper tries to hide her rock under a bush. But forgets she’s wearing a tutu and gets stuck. Tinkerbell prints her name on every rock she finds claiming, “intellectual property.” And Coco attempts to stack her rocks into a pyramid. While declaring herself “Rock Pharaoh.” And demands tribute. I am standing there holding a basket of driveway debris wondering how my life became a Depression‑era children’s book.

After thirty minutes of chaos. Screaming. And Coco blowing that whistle like she’s summoning the spirits. The cats gather around their “egg” piles. Piper has one giant rock she refuses to let go of. Tinkerbell has curated a tasteful collection of smooth stones arranged by color gradient. Coco has built a rock fortress and is now guarding it like a dragon. I clap my hands and say, “Happy Easter, everyone!” Piper throws her arms up and yells, “We did it. We beat poverty.” And I replied, “No, baby. We absolutely did not. But we survived it with style.”

And that, my friends, is how my household celebrated Easter this year. Three cats in couture. Hunting driveway rocks like they were Fabergé eggs. And proving once again that joy has never, not once in the history of the South, depended on money. It has always depended on chaos, commitment, and a tutu that refuses to quit.

This is how Easter went down in this household with three cats dressed like they were attending a budget‑friendly Coachella. Hunting driveway rocks with the intensity of Olympic athletes. And the dignity of raccoons in formalwear.

Piper strutted around with her giant boulder like she had just won Miss Universe: Rock Division. Tinkerbell curated her stone collection like she was preparing for a Sotheby’s auction titled “Recession Chic: The Pebble Edition.” And Coco built a fortress so structurally sound that FEMA should probably take notes. Meanwhile, I stood there clutching a basket of gravel while realizing that this is my life now. I’m a woman who once dreamed of stability. But now I’m painting driveway rocks because the economy said, “Not today, sweetheart.’

But here’s the thing. We laughed. We played. We made magic out of minerals. Because joy isn’t about the price of eggs. It’s about the chaos you create with the creatures who love you. Even when you’re out here painting driveway debris like a broke Renaissance artist who got kicked out of art school for using “nontraditional mediums.”

So let the world crumble. Let the prices rise. Let the eggs remain unaffordable. We will be in the driveway wearing our finest thrift‑store couture. Hunting rocks like they’re treasure. And proving, once again, that resilience is just Southern stubbornness wearing a tutu. And that’s on Easter. Mic dropped. Rock rolled. Thanks for reading! Happy Easter!

Affirmation: I am resourceful, resilient, and fully capable of turning driveway rocks into holiday magic.

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

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He Is Risen. And So Is My Blood Pressure Watching Christians Misquote Scripture Again

“If Jesus didn’t need help rising from the dead, He definitely doesn’t need help judging His children.”

-This Puzzled Life

 Let the ancestors lean in. And the nonsense scatter like roaches when the kitchen light flips on. I’m clearing the air. Clearing my spirit. And clearing out anybody who came in here with judgmental energy, weaponized scripture, or a Facebook theology degree. Today we’re telling the truth with love, humor, and just enough Southern heat to make the devil fan himself.

Every year, Easter rolls around and suddenly half the conservative Christians in the South start acting like they’ve been personally hired by Jesus HR to conduct performance reviews on the entire population. They show up to church in pastel outfits so loud they could blind a deacon armed with judgment, casserole, and a Bible verse they skimmed once during Vacation Bible School in 1994.

Meanwhile, Jesus is over here like, “I rose from the dead to bring hope and liberation. Not to watch y’all turn my message into a neighborhood watch program for people who don’t look, love, or live like you.” But bless their hearts. They really believe Easter is about policing everyone else’s salvation. Like Jesus outsourced His job to a committee of pearl‑clutchers with Wi‑Fi.

Easter is supposed to be the celebration of renewal, liberation, and radical compassion. He was a man who literally washed feet. Fed strangers. And hung out with the outcasts. And provided a message of hope for the poor, the hungry, the immigrant, the traumatized, the eccentric, the ethnically diverse, and the folks society shoved to the margins.

Jesus was the original “bring everybody to the table” host. He didn’t ask for dress codes, doctrinal purity, or a background check. He said, “Come as you are.” And meant it. Not “Come as you are, unless Brenda doesn’t approve of your haircut.”

Somewhere along the way, though, a whole crowd of folks decided Jesus needed personal judges. A volunteer morality police. A neighborhood watch for rainbow flags. A holiness HOA. A spiritual TSA checkpoint. And they signed up like it was a Black Friday sale.

They twist His words like balloon animals. Weaponize scripture like it’s a Nerf gun. And act like Jesus is running a multi‑level marketing scheme where the top sellers get a crown and a parking spot in heaven. They weaponize His teachings against LGBTQIA+ folks, immigrants, people of color, the poor, or anyone who doesn’t fit their “approved” mold.

And then they have the audacity, the sheer sanctified audacity, to say they’re doing it “in Jesus’ name.” Jesus didn’t ask for helpers. He didn’t post a job listing for “Assistant Judge. An unpaid internship where you must hate fun.” If anything, he said the opposite such as, “Sit down. Be humble. Love people. And stop acting like you’re the CEO of Heaven’s HR department.”

Let’s talk about the rainbow for a second. Conservative Christians love to act like the rainbow was stolen, borrowed, or misused by queer folks. Jesus made the rainbow. The gays just accessorized it better. And queer folks are honoring the original design with more creativity, joy, and community than the people who claim ownership of it. If Jesus didn’t want the rainbow to be a symbol of diversity, unity, and hope, he wouldn’t have made it look like the world’s happiest flag.

Jesus was pro‑poor, pro‑immigrant, pro‑outcast, pro‑community, pro‑healing, pro‑inclusion, and pro‑“stop being hateful and go feed somebody.” He was the original DEI ( Diversity, Equity, Inclusion) department. Long before corporate America slapped it on a PowerPoint slide. He didn’t need a committee. He didn’t need a board vote. He didn’t need a church newsletter. He just did the work.

Christians love to toss around the phrase “hate the sin, love the sinner” like it fell straight out of Jesus’ mouth and onto a Hobby Lobby wall sign. But it did not. That line is nowhere in the Bible. Not in Genesis. Not in Psalms. Not in Leviticus. And not even hidden in the fine print of Revelation. The idea is loosely connected to Christian teachings. Sure. The actual phrase traces back to St. Augustine of Hippo in 424 AD. And it didn’t get its modern glow‑up until Mahatma Gandhi repeated a version of it centuries later. So, if folks want to use it, fine. But let’s stop pretending it’s scripture when it’s clearly not. As one source puts it, the exact phrase simply isn’t in the Bible (Catholic.com, 2026). In other words, quit assigning Jesus quotes he never said. Especially when they’re being used as a permission slip for judgment.

This Easter, let’s remember what actually happened. A brown, Middle‑Eastern, homeless, anti‑authoritarian healer rose from the dead to liberate humanity. Not to give conservative Christians a seasonal excuse to cosplay as Heaven’s security guards. Easter is about resurrection. Not regulation. Liberation. Not legislation. Compassion. Not condemnation.

If Jesus wanted personal judges, he would’ve hired them. Instead, he told everybody to love their neighbor and mind their business. Let’s celebrate Easter the way Jesus intended. With open arms, hearts, tables, and absolutely no volunteer applications for Assistant Judge of the Universe. He’s got that job covered. And the rainbow says the gays are doing just fine. Thanks for reading! Stay spiritually focus instead of judgmental.

Affirmation: I walk in the kind of love, compassion, and radical inclusion Jesus actually taught. Not the edited, fear‑based version some folks try to pass off as scripture.

***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

When Purity Culture Protects Predators: The Duggar Edition

“If your righteousness collapses the moment accountability arrives, it was never righteousness. It was camouflage.”

-This Puzzled Life

Light the charcoal. Sprinkle the sage. Today we’re grilling up a fresh batch of religious hypocrisy “Duggar‑style.” That special brand of “family values” where the skirts are long. The hair is crunchy. And the list of sex crimes is longer than the Old Testament. You’d think a family with 19 kids and a camera crew would’ve spent at least five minutes teaching their sons that maybe the real sin isn’t masturbation. It’s molesting children. But no. No, no, no. The Duggar doctrine has always been, “Touching yourself is evil. But touching your sisters? Well, let’s pray about it.”

And now here we are again. Another Duggar son, this time Joseph. Has been making headlines for the same nightmare behavior that already sent Josh Duggar, his brother, to prison. After Josh was found guilty of possessing child sexual abuse material and sentenced in 2022. A family tree so rotten it’s practically compost. And the wildest part? These aren’t drag queens. These aren’t queer folks. These aren’t immigrants. These aren’t the people conservative Christians love to foam at the mouth about. Nope. It’s straight, white, right‑wing, Bible‑thumping men. Yet again, harming children while preaching purity like they invented it.

Meanwhile the kids they violated? They’re left with trauma that doesn’t get a sentence reduction. A parole hearing. Or early release for “good behavior.” They carry it forever. In their bodies. In their nervous systems. In the quiet moments nobody else sees. But sure. Tell me again how queer people are the threat? Tell me again how trans folks using the bathroom is the downfall of civilization? Tell me again how cannabis is the devil’s lettuce while your sons are out here committing crimes that shatter childhoods?

At this point, the Duggar brand of Christianity is so tainted it needs a hazmat label. Everything they’ve preached about morality, purity, and righteousness has evaporated like holy water on a hot skillet. Their “faith” isn’t faith. It’s a costume. A prop. A shield for predators who hide behind scripture while desecrating everything it claims to stand for.

And the saddest part? There are still people who will defend them. Still people who will twist themselves into theological pretzels to excuse the inexcusable. Still people who will say, “Well, nobody’s perfect.” As if imperfection and predation are the same category. They aren’t. They never will be. Some things are unforgivable. Some things stain a soul so deeply that no amount of prayer, repentance, or PR spin can scrub it clean.

And if the most powerful seat in the nation can be held by someone repeatedly accused of harming women and children, it’s no wonder his supporters think this behavior is normal. It’s no wonder they defend it. It’s no wonder they minimize it. When your leader models entitlement, cruelty, and moral decay, the flock follows.

And here’s the part nobody in their starched‑collar, Bible‑thumping echo chamber wants to hear. The one they can’t sermonize away. Children deserve safety. Children deserve protection. Children deserve a world where their bodies are not battlegrounds for someone else’s power, lust, or theology. And anyone who violates that? Anyone who destroys a child’s sense of safety? Anyone who weaponizes religion to excuse it? They’ve forfeited the right to be seen as righteous. They’ve forfeited the right to be believed. They’ve forfeited the right to preach about morality ever again.

If your faith can’t protect children from your own men, it’s not faith. It’s a cover‑up with a choir. You don’t get to preach purity while you and your sons are out here shattering childhoods. You don’t get to weaponize scripture against queer folks. While ignoring the predators in your own pews. You don’t get to call yourselves “God’s chosen family.” When the only thing you’ve consistently produced is trauma, denial, and a PR team working overtime.

Because the truth is simple. If your faith collapses the moment accountability walks into the room, it was a costume stitched together with shame, silence, and selective morality. And the children you failed? They will grow up carrying scars your sermons can’t erase. They will spend years rebuilding safety you stole. They will learn to trust themselves again in a world you taught them was dangerous. When the danger was sitting at your own dinner table.

Meanwhile, the men who harmed them will keep hiding behind the same religion they desecrated. Counting on the same community that protected them. And quoting the same verses they never lived by. Truth doesn’t care about your reputation. It doesn’t care about your brand. It doesn’t care about your “family values” photo ops. It shows up loud, uninvited, and holding receipts.

And once it arrives, there’s no going back. No amount of prayer circles, modesty lectures, or “thoughts and prayers” statements can un‑rot a tree that’s been diseased from the roots. So let the world take note. It wasn’t drag queens. It wasn’t trans folks. It wasn’t immigrants. It wasn’t the communities you demonize. It was your own men. Again. And again. And again.

And if that truth makes your theology crumble? Good. Let it fall. Let it burn. Let it clear the ground for something that actually protects children instead of protecting predators. Because at the end of the day, the only thing more dangerous than a man who harms children, is a community that refuses to hold him accountable. And if your religion can’t tell the difference between righteousness and abuse, then it’s not holy. It’s a hiding place. Thanks for reading! And do your part to protect our children.

Affirmation: I honor truth. Protect the vulnerable. And refuse to let anyone hide abuse behind faith, power, or fear.

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

#ThisPuzzledLife