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

Reefer Madness: The Original ‘Fake News’ Tornado

“If the smell of cannabis could kill you, half the country would’ve dropped dead at a Snoop Dogg concert.”

-This Puzzled Life

Light the charcoal. Pull up a lawn chair. And pour yourself a glass of sweet tea so strong it could dissolve a horseshoe. Today,  we’re about to roast one of the biggest cultural catastrophes ever sold to the American public, Reefer Madness. This was the original “fake news tornado.” The 1936 panic‑propaganda film that convinced America, coast to coast, that cannabis was basically Satan doing the two‑step in your living room. A film so dramatic it made Pentecostal revivals look subtle. A film so unhinged it claimed one puff of cannabis would turn your teenager into a jazz‑addicted, piano‑smashing menace to society.

If Reefer Madness came out today, it would be labeled satire and streamed on Hulu between a cult documentary and a reality show about doomsday preppers. But back then? Folks ate it up like it was gospel. And while the whole country swallowed the hysteria, the South, with its love of moral order, church‑based authority, and “protect the children” politics, became one of the loudest amplifiers of the panic. And the smoke from that lie is still hanging in the air.

Reefer Madness didn’t just sprout up like a weed in the yard. It was engineered. And cooked up like a casserole nobody asked for.

1. Harry Anslinger needed a new villain

When alcohol prohibition ended, Harry Anslinger, head of the Federal Bureau of Narcotics, needed a new enemy to stay relevant. He chose cannabis and went full Broadway villain about it. 

Source: U.S. National Archives; NPR reporting on Anslinger’s anti‑cannabis campaign. https://www.npr.org/sections/codeswitch/2013/07/14/201981025/the-racist-roots-of-marijuana-prohibition (npr.org in Bing).

2. Racist fearmongering was the secret ingredient

Anslinger pushed the idea that cannabis made Black and Mexican communities violent or “unpredictable,” and newspapers ran with it like it was scripture. Source:Smithsonian Magazine; Brookings Institution analysis of early cannabis criminalization. https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/brief-history-us-marijuana-laws-180967762/ (smithsonianmag.com in Bing)

Source: Brookings Institution analysis https://www.brookings.edu/articles/the-racist-origins-of-marijuana-prohibition/ (brookings.edu in Bing)

3. Zero science, maximum hysteria

Instead of research, they relied on headlines like

  • “Marijuana: Assassin of Youth”
  • “The Weed With Roots in Hell” Source: Library of Congress newspaper archives.

Reefer Madness became the 1930s version of a viral Facebook panic post. Except instead of your aunt sharing it, it was the federal government. Source:Library of Congress newspaper archives https://www.loc.gov/item/2016655020/

Reefer Madness didn’t start in the South. But the South sure knew how to run with it.

1. Moral panic fit neatly into “family values” politics

The messaging aligned perfectly with long‑standing cultural fears about pleasure, rebellion, and anything that might loosen the grip of social control.

2. Racist narratives aligned with Jim Crow politics

The film’s messaging reinforced the same racist stereotypes used to justify segregation and policing. Source: ACLU report on racial disparities in cannabis arrests. https://www.aclu.org/report/tale-two-countries-racially-targeted-arrests-era-marijuana-reform (aclu.orgin Bing)

3. Churches amplified the message

Pastors preached that cannabis was a gateway to sin, jazz, and loose behavior. Which, ironically, made it sound more fun.

4. But let’s be clear. The whole country bought the lie.

From California to New York, lawmakers, newspapers, and civic groups all joined the panic parade. The South wasn’t alone. It was just louder, more dramatic, and more committed to the bit.

How Reefer Madness Still Shapes the Cannabis Industry Today

1. Criminalization that lasted generations

Decades of arrests of overwhelmingly targeting Black and brown communities created barriers that still affect who gets to participate in the legal industry. Source:ACLU racial disparity data. https://www.aclu.org/report/tale-two-countries-racially-targeted-arrests-era-marijuana-reform (aclu.org in Bing).

2. Stigma that refuses to die

Even now, people across the country acted like the church bulletin just burst into flames at the word “cannabis” like it’s a demon trying to get on the church roll. Source: Pew Research Center surveys on cannabis attitudes. https://www.pewresearch.org/short-reads/2024/03/26/americans-say-marijuana-should-be-legal/ (pewresearch.org in Bing).

3. Regulatory chaos

Because the plant was demonized instead of studied, the modern industry is still fighting inconsistent state laws, banking restrictions, and research barriers. Source: Congressional Research Service on cannabis policy https://crsreports.congress.gov/product/pdf/R/R44782 (crsreports.congress.gov in Bing)

Source: FDA on research limitations https://www.fda.gov/news-events/public-health-focus/fda-and-cannabis-research-and-drug-approval-process (fda.govin Bing).

4. Misinformation still shapes public opinion

People trust alcohol, a literal toxin, more than a plant with thousands of years of medicinal use. Source: CDC alcohol toxicity data; NIH cannabis research summaries. https://www.cdc.gov/alcohol/fact-sheets/alcohol-use.htm(cdc.gov in Bing)

Source: NIH cannabis research summaries https://nida.nih.gov/publications/research-reports/marijuana/what-are-marijuanas-effects (nida.nih.gov in Bing)

Despite the chaos, the cannabis industry is doing what Americans do best. It’s taking something messy, misinformed, historically wrong and turning it into something useful. We now have terpene education, standardized dosing, medical research, legalization movements, and a whole generation saying, “Wait. Y’all lied to us?” Reefer Madness may have started the conversation, but it sure as hell won’t end it.

So, here’s to the end of Reefer Madness thinking. May it finally be laid to rest next to corsets, bloodletting, and the belief that margarine is healthier than butter. And may the next time someone Southern, Northern, coastal, or corn‑fed tries to warn you about the “dangers” of cannabis, you smile sweetly and say “Honey, the only madness here is believing a 1936 propaganda film over actual science.”

“Reefer Madness didn’t just misinform America. It became the blueprint for 80 years of bad policy, demonizing religious communities, and political theater. The only thing it ever got right was the jazz.”

And let’s end with this, loud enough for the folks in the back who still think the smell of cannabis is going to send them straight to glory. The scent of burning cannabis will not make you instantly die. It won’t stop your heart. It won’t melt your morals. It won’t summon jazz musicians to corrupt your children. It won’t even give you a contact high unless you’re basically hotboxing inside a broom closet with Snoop Dogg.

We have survived Reefer Madness, the propaganda, survived the sermons, survived the politicians who swore a whiff of weed would turn the whole country into a jazz‑fueled apocalypse. We survived the lies. So now? You can survive the smoke. Or if the smell of a plant sends you into a full spiritual crisis, you are absolutely free to march around town in a gas mask like you’re training for the CDC Olympics. That’s between you, your lungs, and your HOA. But the rest of us? We’re done pretending the air is dangerous just because the truth finally burned hot enough to rise.

And let’s be honest. Nobody throws a fit over the smell of cigarette smoke. You can walk through a parking lot littered with butts, past a bar that smells like regret and menthols, and not one person starts a moral crusade. Alcohol? Legal, glorified, and sold next to the Lunchables despite being a literal toxin that’s wrecked more lives than cannabis ever could. But one whiff of weed and suddenly folks are acting like they’ve been personally attacked by a cloud. If you can survive the scent of stale beer and your uncle’s Marlboro breath, you can survive a terpene breeze without filing a complaint to the HOA.

Affirmation: I am stronger than propaganda and calmer than a 1936 panic attack.

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

#ThisPuzzledLife

If These Cats Don’t Stop Explaining Weed, I’m Calling Jesus

“If life hands you chaos, season it like cast‑iron and keep on cookin’.”

  -Tinkerbell, Chairwoman of Household Dignity and Selective Judgment

Light the charcoal. Sprinkle the sage. Negative energy go away. Lord knows if we don’t cleanse this house before we start talking, one of these cats is gonna summon something we can’t put back. Piper already knocked over a jar of buttons like she was opening a portal. Coco’s in the kitchen licking cornbread crumbs off the floor like she’s trying to divine the future. And Tinkerbell? She’s perched on the back of the recliner judging everybody like the church usher who knows your business. 

So yes, light the charcoal. Sprinkle the sage. Shoo the foolishness out the door. We’re about to discuss cannabis. And these Deep South cats have opinions they did not ask permission to have.

Piper struts in like she owns the deed to the house. Tail high. Eyes wide. And already judging.

“Why,” she begins, “do half these strains sound like folks we’re related to.” She’s not wrong.

Piper’s Official List of ‘That’s Somebody’s Cousin’ Strains

  • Bubba Kush– “Tell me that ain’t the man who fixed your alternator in 2009.”
  • Larry OG – “Larry still owes Mama twenty dollars.”
  • Billy Kimber – “He’s the one who got banned from the Piggly Wiggly.”
  • Runtz – “That’s the kid who used to steal Capri Suns at Vacation Bible School.”

Piper says cannabis naming committees are clearly run by “men named Scooter who wear camo to funerals.” She ends her segment by knocking over a Mason jar and calling it “cultural commentary.” 

Coco waddles in like she just finished a plate of cornbread and is ready to testify before Congress.

“Listen,” she says, licking crumbs off her chest, “if you name a strain after food, I will assume it’s a snack. That’s on y’all.”

Coco’s Deep South Review of Food Strains

  • Georgia Pie– “Where is the cobbler? Don’t play with me.”
  • Banana Pudding– “If it ain’t layered with Nilla wafers, it’s false advertising.”
  • Gumbo– “This one made me mad on principle.”
  • Watermelon Zkittlez-“This tastes like somebody lied.”

Coco proposes new, more honest Southern strain names such as:

  • “I’m Too High to Go to Walmart”
  • “Front Porch Philosophy Hour”
  • “Who Ate the Last Biscuit”
  • “I Swear I Heard a Ghost in the Hallway”

She ends her speech by stealing a Cheez-It and blaming it on “the humidity.”

Tinkerbell sits like a church lady who’s about to tell you she’s praying for you. But also judging your life.

“These names,” she says, “are for people who think they’re having a spiritual awakening but are actually just staring at the ceiling fan.”

Examples from the Church Bulletin of Weed

  • Northern Lights-“Ma’am, you are in Mississippi. The only lights you’re seeing are from the Dollar General sign.”
  • Skywalker OG – “You are not walking anywhere. Sit down.”
  • God’s Gift -“Bold. Very bold.”
  • Third Eye– “That’s not enlightenment. That’s dehydration.”

Tinkerbell recommends all spiritual strains come with a warning label that reads, “May cause you to think you’ve discovered the meaning of life when you’ve actually just been petting the same blanket for 45 minutes.” She concludes by reminding everyone that she is the only one in this house with dignity. Piper says, “Rename everything. Y’all lack imagination.” Coco says, “Snacks should be included with purchase.” Tinkerbell says, “Please stop embarrassing the household in front of the neighbors.”

And that, is all the wisdom these Mississippi cats have to offer today. And how my cats, three unlicensed, unqualified, deeply Southern creatures, have chosen to explain cannabis strain names. With judgment, crumbs, and the confidence of a possum in a Waffle House parking lot. And even that is hanging by a thread.

Piper’s already stomping off like she’s late for her shift at the Waffle House. Coco has entered her post‑snack coma. And cannot be reached for comment. Tinkerbell is staring out the window like she’s narrating a true‑crime documentary about the rest of us.

As we wrap this up, go on and light the charcoal one more time. Sweep the foolishness out the door. And thank the Lord above that cannabis doesn’t come with a family reunion attached. Because half of these strain names already sound like they’d show up uninvited. Asked for gas money. And leave with your Tupperware.

Until next time, may your weed be smooth. Your snacks be plentiful. And your cats mind their business for at least five consecutive minutes. Amen, Ashe, and y’all behave now. Thanks for reading! Keep blazin.’

Affirmation: I can handle whatever today throws at me. Even if it’s lopsided, underseasoned, or delivered by a cat with an attitude. I stay grounded, I stay Southern, and I stay unbothered.

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

#ThisPuzzledLife

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!***

#ThisPuzzledLife

Bless This Mess: The Cats Take Over Cannabis Awareness Month

“If God didn’t want us learning about cannabis, he wouldn’t have made half my cousins impossible to tolerate without it.” 

-Mavis “Two-Puffs” Delacroix

Light the charcoal. Sprinkle the sage. Negative energy, go on and get. Today, we are gathered here in this living room that smells like lavender spray, and cat hair. This will officially kick off Cannabis Awareness Month under the watchful, judgmental, and wildly unqualified leadership of my three feline board members.

Piper has already climbed onto the podium wearing a green tutu like she’s the spiritual advisor of the entire Gulf South. Coco is in the corner eating something that is absolutely not food. And Tinkerbell is perched high above us all. And blinking slowly as if to say, “I cannot believe I share a mortgage with these people.” And she has no mortgage. So, take a breath. Set your intentions. Hide your snacks. The cats are ready to educate the public. And Lord help us. They have prepared statements.

Welcome back to the only blog on the internet where Cannabis Awareness Month is celebrated with the same energy most families reserve for Easter Sunday and tax refunds. In this house, the educational programming is run by three cats who have never once read a law. Paid a bill. Or respected personal space. Piper is already wearing a green tutu like she’s the patron saint of responsible consumption. Coco is pre-gaming with the emergency snacks. And Tinkerbell is in the corner judging everyone’s life choices with the quiet authority of a Southern grandmother. If you came here calmly, you’re in the wrong place. If you came here for chaos, education, and a sprinkle of cat-led activism, pull up a seat.

Every April, the rest of America politely acknowledges Cannabis Awareness Month like it’s a PTA meeting. Meanwhile, down here in the Deep South, my household treats it like the Met Gala of Mindfulness. Except the outfits are Dollar General pajamas. The snacks are missing (because Coco). And the educational portion is led by three cats who have never paid a bill in their lives. But bless it, they try.

Piper “The Tootin’ Tutu Tornado”  kicks off the month by dragging a green feather boa across the living room like she’s the Beyoncé of harm reduction. She hops on the table. Knocks over a brochure and says, “Cannabis Awareness Month means education, mother.”

She’s not wrong. Cannabis Awareness Month is all about understanding safe, responsible use. Reducing stigma. Learning the difference between THC, CBD, and “whatever your cousin grew behind the shed in 1998.” Knowing your limits. And for the love of Mississippi, not mixing edibles with a church potluck.

Piper then tries to teach the household about terpenes but gets distracted by her own tail. Awareness is a journey. Coco, the Snack Lobbyist, takes a different approach. She sets up a “Cannabis & Munchies Preparedness Station.” Which is really just an empty bag of Doritos. A half-chewed cat treat. And a sticky note that says, “PLAN AHEAD.” She insists it’s educational. Coco’s key message is ,“If you stay ready, you don’t have to get ready.” She’s basically a Southern auntie in a fur coat.

Tinkerbell, the dignified conductor of this circus, takes Cannabis Awareness Month very seriously. She sits everyone down for a lecture titled “Cannabis, Calm, and Why Y’all Are Doing Too Much?” Which covers setting intentions. Respecting your body. Understanding dosage. Avoiding the “I’m fine” spiral that ends with you reorganizing the pantry at 2 AM. And the importance of not letting Piper run any more workshops. She ends her presentation by flicking her tail and walking away. Which is cat for “class dismissed.”

Piper stands on the arm of the couch like she’s delivering the State of the Union. Coco is eating something he absolutely should not be eating. Tinkerbell is judging us all. Together, they recite the official household pledge, “We promise to consume responsibly, stay hydrated, respect the plant, and never, ever let Piper be in charge of snacks.” Amen.

And that concludes this month’s household seminar on cannabis awareness is brought to you by Piper’s unlicensed enthusiasm. Coco’s snack-based curriculum. And Tinkerbell’s unwavering belief that everyone else is doing it wrong. As we wrap up, remember to stay informed. Stay responsible. And never let a cat who can’t even find his own tail be in charge of dosage discussions. May your month be calm. Your snacks be plentiful. And your cats be slightly less dramatic than mine. But honestly, I wouldn’t count on it. Longest “Big Beautiful affirmation” in the history of our country. Thank you for your attention to this matter. Thanks for reading! Stay informed.

Affirmation: “I move through this month with clarity, humor, and a heart unbothered by chaos. I honor the plant. Protect my peace,l. And trust myself to stay grounded even when Piper is preaching. Coco is crunching. And Tinkerbell is judging from above. I am calm. I am capable. And I am fully prepared for whatever foolishness this household delivers.”

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

#ThisPuzzledLife

Science, Snacks, and Sass: The Feline Takeover of Drug & Alcohol Facts Week

“Facts don’t care about feelings, but feelings care deeply about snacks.”

 — The Feline Public Health Department

 Light the charcoal. Sprinkle the sage. Negative energy go away. It’s National Drug & Alcohol Facts Week. My cats have decided they are the official spokes‑animals for science, safety, and whatever chaos they can stir up before breakfast. Welcome back to This Puzzled Life. Where the trauma is seasoned. The humor is medicinal. And the cats are convinced they’re running a public health campaign.

Piper busts into the room wearing a lab coat three sizes too big.

“Mother, did you know the National Institute on Drug Abuse says misinformation spreads faster than I can knock a cup off the counter?” (Which is fast. Very fast.)

Source: National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA)  “National Drug & Alcohol Facts Week” https://nida.nih.gov.

Coco is dragging a bag of snacks like she’s smuggling contraband. 

“I’m here to talk about addiction. But first, do we have chips? Because the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism says alcohol affects judgment. And I’m about to make a bad decision if you don’t hand over the Doritos.”

Source: National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA) “Alcohol’s Effects on the Body” https://niaaa.nih.gov.

Tinkerbell is sitting on the highest shelf like a judgmental librarian.

“Actually, according to the CDC, substance use can affect brain development. Especially in teens. Which is why I supervise the boys. They need guidance. And snacks. Mostly snacks.”

Source: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)  “Substance Use and Youth” https://cdc.gov.

Here are a few clean, accurate, all‑ages‑appropriate facts from reputable organizations:

1. Alcohol affects every organ in the body.

Source: NIAAA  Alcohol’s Effects on the Body https://niaaa.nih.gov.

2. Most teens who misuse substances get their information from peers, not professionals.

Source: NIDA National Drug & Alcohol Facts Week https://nida.nih.gov.

3. Substance use can impact brain development into the mid‑20s.

Source: CDC Substance Use and Youth https://cdc.gov.

4. Addiction is a medical condition. Not a moral failure.

Source: Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) https://samhsa.gov.

Piper’s Lesson: “Drugs don’t magically make problems disappear. That’s what naps are for.”

Coco’s Lesson: “Alcohol slows reaction time. Which is why I don’t drink. I must remain ready to sprint toward any dropped food.”

Tinkerbell’s Lesson: “Knowledge is power. And power is knowing where the treats are hidden.”

My household stays loud and educational. The cats insisted on adding this. Science supports people making informed choices. Science supports harm reduction. Science supports LGBTQIA+ folks having access to accurate, stigma‑free information. Science does NOT support Aunt Barbara’s Facebook posts. Piper said that last part. I’m just reporting.

Piper climbs onto the table wearing a tiny pair of reading glasses she stole from somewhere.

“According to NIDA, over 20% of 12th graders reported using an illicit drug in the past year. That’s too many. That’s also the percentage of times I listen when Mother says, ‘get off the counter.’”

Source: National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) Monitoring the Future Survey https://nida.nih.gov.

She flips a page dramatically.

“And nicotine vaping among teens is still one of the most common forms of substance use. Which is wild because I can’t even get Mother to let me sniff the humidifier.”

Source: NIDA Teen Vaping Trends https://nida.nih.gov.

Coco waddles in carrying a bag of treats like a briefcase.

“Listen up. The CDC says alcohol is the most commonly used substance among youth in the United States. Which explains why teenagers make decisions like climbing on roofs. And dating boys who wear Axe body spray.”

Source: CDC Youth Substance Use https://cdc.gov.

She pauses to eat a treat.

“And get this. About 1 in 5 high school students reported binge drinking. Meanwhile, I binge eat kibble and nobody gives me a national awareness week.”

Source: CDC  Underage Drinking https://cdc.gov.

Tinkerbell sits on her throne (the top of the fridge) and clears her throat like a disappointed professor.

“According to SAMHSA, over 46 million people in the U.S. met the criteria for a substance use disorder in 2021. That’s a lot of people needing support, compassion, and maybe a cat to sit on their chest and purr aggressively.”

Source: SAMHSA National Survey on Drug Use and Health https://samhsa.gov.

She adjusts her imaginary pearls.

“And here’s a big one. Only about 6% of people with a substance use disorder received treatment. 6%! That’s lower than the percentage of times Coco shares snacks.”

Source: SAMHSA Treatment Statistics https://samhsa.gov.                                                                                                                                                              As National Drug & Alcohol Facts wraps up, my cats would like to remind you to

Piper: “Stay curious, not chaotic.”

Coco: “Stay hydrated and snack‑positive.”

Tinkerbell: “Stay informed. Stay fabulous. And stop believing memes your cousin posted at 2 AM.”

And honestly? That’s the most scientifically accurate advice you’ll hear all week. Because the current administration doesn’t believe in science.

And that, my friends, concludes National Drug & Alcohol Facts Week as interpreted by three cats who have never paid taxes, never followed a rule, and yet somehow run this household like a federally funded research lab. Piper has knocked over every myth she could reach. Coco has eaten every statistic that wasn’t nailed down. Tinkerbell has judged the entire nation from the top of the fridge.

We’ve cited the CDC, NIDA, NIAAA, and SAMHSA. Because around here, we believe in facts, snacks, and queer‑centered harm‑reduction education. In that order. Take what you learned, Take what you laughed at. And take a deep breath. Because knowledge is power. Compassion is necessary. And humor is how we survive the South. Class dismissed. Sage extinguished. Cats victorious. Thanks for reading! Drop a comment about what you thought about the girls in this blog.

Affirmation: I choose knowledge over fear, compassion over judgment, and humor over everything else.

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

#ThisPuzzledLife

Finale: The Cats Try to Spend Magical Currency at Dollar General

“The cashier said, ‘Ma’am, this is plastic,’ and my soul left my body.”

-This Puzzled Life

Welcome to the finale, y’all. It’s time. Grab your sweet tea. Hide your valuables. Alert the clergy. This is the final chapter of this leprechaun‑cat catastrophe. The moment where all the glitter, chaos, and questionable decision‑making finally collide in one glorious, unhinged explosion of events.

By now, the cats have declared war on a leprechaun. Traumatized said leprechaun. Received a counterfeit gold coin. Triggered a magical escalation that absolutely should’ve required permits. And will attempt to spend it at Dollar General.

And now, in the grand finale, the universe has decided to respond with the same energy my cats bring to 3 a.m.zoomies.

Tinkerbell is polishing her “I told you so” face. Coco is updating her clipboard like she’s preparing for a congressional hearing. Piper is vibrating at a frequency only dogs and angels can hear. And me I’m just standing here. Holding my coffee. And wondering how my life became a crossover episode between National Geographic and Jerry Springer?

The leprechauns were gone. The glitter had settled. Piper was still hyped with the confidence of someone who absolutely did not deserve confidence. And then Coco said the six words that guaranteed chaos, “We should spend the gold coin.”

Tinkerbell froze mid‑lick.

Tinkerbell: “Where?”

Coco: “Dollar General.”

Piper screamed like she’d been chosen for The Hunger Games.

Piper: “Yes. Let’s buy treats and a laser pointer and maybe a small appliance.”

Tinkerbell: “We are not buying a small appliance.”

Piper: “A toaster.”

Tinkerbell: “No.”

I made the mistake of putting on shoes. The cats interpreted this as, “We are going on a field trip.” Before I could blink, Piper was in the tote bag. Coco was sitting by the door like she was waiting for an Uber. And Tinkerbell was already judging the entire outing. I sighed. They took that as consent.

The drive to Dollar General felt like escorting three tiny, unlicensed criminals to the scene of their future arrest. Piper was in the tote bag practicing her “customer service voice.” And it sounded like a gremlin trying to order at Starbucks. Coco was reviewing her clipboard like she was preparing to testify before Congress. Tinkerbell sat in the passenger seat with the energy of a grandmother who is already disappointed in everyone.

Tinkerbell: “If we get banned from Dollar General, I’m blaming all of you.”

Piper: “We’re not getting banned. We’re getting treats.”

Coco: “And justice.”

Me: “We’re getting Advil.”

We eventually pulled into the parking lot. The cats acted like we had arrived at Disney World. Piper tried to leap out of the tote bag like she was BASE‑jumping off a cliff. Coco strutted in like she owned the franchise. Tinkerbell walked with the slow, resigned dignity of someone who has accepted her fate.

Inside, the fluorescent lights buzzed like they were warning us.

Piper: “The treats are this way. I can smell them.”

Coco: “Stay focused. We have a mission.”

Tinkerbell: “I’m too old for this.”

They located their beloved Temptations with the precision of Navy SEALs. Piper hugged the bag. Coco inspected the expiration date. Tinkerbell sighed like she was filing for early retirement. And then, God help me, we approached the register.

The cashier was a sweet Southern woman with the patience of a preschool teacher. And the eyes of someone who has seen things like this before. She smiled at us. She shouldn’t have.

Cashier: “Did y’all find everything okay?”

Me: “Unfortunately, yes.”

Piper proudly placed the magical coin on the counter like she was presenting the Hope Diamond. Cashier picked it up. Squinted. Tapped it on the counter. And said the sentence that will haunt me until the day I die.

Cashier: “Ma’am, this is plastic.”

Coco gasped like she’d been shot.

Coco: “Plastic? Impossible. It’s enchanted.”

Tinkerbell: “It’s a toy, you idiot.”

Piper: “It’s currency in my heart.”

Me: “I can pay with my card.”

Cashier: “I’m gonna have to call my manager.”

Me internally: I’m going to jail because my cats tried to commit magical fraud.

Apparently, when someone tries to pay with counterfeit money, even if it’s glittery and shaped like a cartoon coin, Dollar General’s policy is to call the police.

Two officers walked in. One looked confused. The other looked tired. And both looked like they regretted their career choices.

Officer #1: “We got a call about counterfeit currency?”

Cashier: “They tried to pay with that.”

She pointed at the coin. Piper immediately sat on it like a dragon protecting her hoard.

Piper: “You’ll never take me alive.”

Officer #2: “Ma’am, are your cats talking?”

Me: “Not officially.”

Coco stepped forward like she was about to negotiate a hostage situation.

Coco: “We were deceived by a leprechaun. We demand justice.”

Officer #1 blinked three times.

Officer #1: “Ma’am, have you been drinking?”

Me: “Not enough.”

Tinkerbell: “We apologize for the inconvenience. We will pay with human money.”

Piper: “Traitor.”

The officers stared at us. Stared at the coin. Stared at the cats. Stared at the cashier. And then at each other. The universal look of two men deciding they do not get paid enough for this.

Officer #2: “Ma’am, please just pay for the treats and go home.”

Me: “Gladly.”

Piper: “This is oppression.”

Coco: “I’m filing a complaint.”

Tinkerbell: “I’m pretending I don’t know any of you.”

I paid. We left. The officers watched us go like they were witnessing a paranormal event they would never speak of again.

Back home, the cats held a tribunal.

Coco stared at the coin like it had personally betrayed her.

Coco: “I invested in this.”

Tinkerbell: “You invested in a toy.”

Piper: “Can I eat it?”

Me: “No.”

Piper: “Then what is the point of anything?”

She flopped dramatically onto the floor like a Victorian child fainting at a piano recital. The cashier stepped around her. Back at the house, the cats held a debriefing.

Tinkerbell: “We were deceived.”

Coco: “We were robbed.”

Piper: “I was promised treats.”

Tinkerbell: “We need a new plan.”

Coco: “We need revenge.”

Piper: “We need to summon him again.”

All three turned to me

Me: “Absolutely not.”

Piper: “But I have unfinished business.”

Tinkerbell: “You have unfinished brain cells.”

After hours of chaos, screaming, and Piper trying to bury the coin in a houseplant, the cats finally agreed on its purpose. It is now a sacred artifact. A symbol of their bravery. Their struggle. Their delusion. They placed it on a pillow like it was the Crown Jewel of Mississippi. Piper guards it at night. Coco audits it daily. Tinkerbell sighs every time she looks at it.

And me I’m just trying to live in a house where the cats almost started a war with generations of leprechauns. And then tried to buy Temptations with counterfeit currency.

And that, ladies, gentlemen, leprechauns, and emotionally unstable house pets, concludes the most unhinged St. Cat‑rick’s Day saga ever documented without federal oversight. The leprechauns have officially withdrawn from all diplomatic relations with my household. Ireland has blocked our number. The Fae Realm, large leprechaun family, has added our address to a “Do Not Teleport” list. And somewhere in a glitter covered forest, a council of magical beings is still screaming into a clipboard trying to process the paperwork.

Tinkerbell has retired from public service and now identifies as “just a house cat.” Coco has pivoted to writing a memoir titled “I Tried to Lead Idiots: A Survival Guide.” Piper is strutting through the house like she won the Revolutionary War, the Super Bowl, and a custody battle all at once. The gold coin sits on its velvet pillow like a cursed family heirloom. The living room still sparkles like a crime scene at a craft store. And I’m sweeping up glitter, wondering if this qualifies as a supernatural trauma response.

But one thing is certain, if the leprechauns ever return or the cats ever get another “idea.” Or if Piper ever screams “I have a plan” again, I’ll be right here coffee in hand documenting the chaos because apparently this is my calling, my ministry, and my tax write‑off. Thank you for surviving this saga with me. May your days be peaceful, your cats be calm, and your leprechauns stay in their lane. Series complete. Chaos eternal.

AffirmationI am patient, even when my cats attempt financial crimes.

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

#ThisPuzzledLife

Part Three: The Fae Sends Backup and Piper Immediately Panics

“Some households wake up to sunshine. Mine wakes up to magical litigation and emotional support glitter.”

-This Puzzled Life

 Light the charcoal. Sprinkle the sage. Negative energy go away. There are mornings when the universe whispers, “Sweet girl, stay in bed.”  And then there are mornings I wake up and whisper my classic prayer. “Lord, grant me the strength to survive whatever nonsense these animals have manifested overnight.” And the universe, being the petty little comedian it is, always replies, “Surprise! I hope you like chaos. buckle up!”

So, there I was at 7 a.m. Barely conscious. Clutching my coffee like a life insurance policy. And my hallway suddenly erupted in a burst of green glitter so aggressively it felt personal. Not whimsical. Not magical. Aggressive. Like a St. Patrick’s Day gender reveal hosted by people who should not legally be allowed near confetti. The cats were suspiciously quiet. And in this home, is the spiritual equivalent of hearing a toddler say, “Don’t come in here.”

And then, POOF! A burst of green glitter detonated in the hallway. My life is a sitcom written by feral raccoons. The leprechauns stepped out looking like they’d already read the Yelp reviews for my household. And they arrived very disappointed. All of them wearing the exact same expression that Southern church ladies reserve for when someone shows up to Easter service in denim.

Tinkerbell froze mid‑groom like a scandalized Southern aunt who just heard someone say “moist” in church. Coco dropped her clipboard. Piper screamed the scream of a creature who has never once made a good decision. And that’s when I knew: My day had clocked in early and was already demanding hazard pay.

Piper: “They brought reinforcements! They know about the ankle incident!”

Coco: “Girl, you assaulted a magical diplomat. Of course they know.”

Tinkerbell: “Everyone stay calm. And Piper, for the love of all things holy, do NOT bite anyone.”

Piper was already in a crouch. The lead leprechaun stepped forward with his hands on his hips, looking like he was about to file a complaint with HR.

Lead Leprechaun: “We’re here for the coin.”

Coco: “Absolutely not. That’s our retirement plan.”

Tinkerbell: “We negotiated in good faith.”

Lead Leprechaun: “Ye negotiated NOTHING. Ye terrorized our cousin.”

Piper: “He started it by existing.”

Tinkerbell: “Piper, please stop talking.”

The second leprechaun pulled out a scroll. A literal scroll. He unrolled it dramatically.

Second Leprechaun: “By order of the High Council of the Fae, we demand the return of the gold coin and a formal apology.”

Coco: “We can give you one of those.”

Piper: “I will never apologize.”

Tinkerbell: “We’ll work on her.”

Tinkerbell stepped forward with her “I’m about to embarrass us all but I’m doing my best” energy.

Tinkerbell: “What if we return the coin but keep one of you as our butler”

All three leprechauns gasped.

Lead Leprechaun: “We are NOT for hire!”

Coco: “Do you have thumbs though.”

Second Leprechaun: “Yes, but…”

Coco: “Then you’re qualified.”

Piper, who had been vibrating with suppressed chaos, suddenly launched herself into the air like a furry missile. She didn’t attack the leprechauns. She attacked the scroll. She shredded it like it owed her money.

Lead Leprechaun: “That was a legal document!”

Piper: “It was crinkly and I have needs.”

Tinkerbell: “I’m so sorry. She’s spirited.”

Coco: “She’s unhinged.”

Piper: “I am the wind.”

The leprechauns huddled together, whispering urgently. Then the lead one turned back to the cats.

Lead Leprechaun: “Fine. Keep the coin. Keep yer chaos. Keep yer… creature.”

Piper hissed proudly

Lead Leprechaun: “But we are NEVER coming back here again.”

Tinkerbell: “That’s fair.”

Coco: “Reasonable.”

Piper: “Cowards! I saved us!”

Tinkerbell: “You caused this.”

Coco: “You’re grounded.”

Piper: “I regret nothing.” 

And honestly she doesn’t. With a final puff of glitter, the leprechauns vanished like they’d just escaped a toxic work environment. The house fell silent. The kind of quiet that says, We will not be discussing this again.”  Tinkerbell sighed the sigh of a woman who has raised too many children who don’t listen. Coco picked up her clipboard and documented the incident like she was preparing for a congressional hearing wrote, “Note: Do not antagonize magical beings.” Piper strutted around with the swagger of someone who absolutely caused an international incident and would do it again before lunch like she’d won a war. And me? I just stood there, wondering how I became the legal guardian of three furry war criminals.

So, if you ever think your morning is chaotic, remember. Somewhere in Mississippi, a lesbian mother of three cats is sweeping up leprechaun glitter while grounding a creature who cannot legally vote but CAN shred a diplomatic document in under three seconds. There is one more part to this fiasco with leprechauns and cats. Stay tuned it will be here soon. Thanks for reading!

Affirmation: I navigate chaos with grace, humor, and the unshakable confidence of a creature who absolutely did not start the fight but will finish it.

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

#ThisPuzzledLife

Part Two: The Leprechaun Who Regretted Knocking on This Door

“Coco tried to negotiate. Piper tried to bite him. And Tinkerbell tried to pretend she didn’t know us.”

-This Puzzled Life

Light a candle. Grab a helmet. Alert the neighbors. And that’s when I knew this wasn’t just Part Two. This was divine punishment for every time I said, “My cats can’t possibly get any weirder.” Part Two begins with a sound no human should ever hear before coffee.

I was in the kitchen minding my business. And trying to decide whether coffee counts as a meal. When I heard a scream. Not a cat scream. Not a human scream. A scream that sounded like a kazoo having a panic attack.

I walked in and found a real leprechaun standing on my coffee table. He was looking like he’d been kidnapped by fate. And dropped directly into a house he did NOT have the emotional bandwidth for. My cats froze like they’d just seen a ghost, a rotisserie chicken, and the IRS all at once. The leprechaun adjusted his little green coat and glared at them.

Tinkerbell: “Oh Lord, he’s real.” 

Coco: “We are so getting sued.” 

Piper: “I call dibs on his ankles.”

Leprechaun: “Which one of ye hooligans set a trap made of catnip, cereal, and a shoelace”

Coco: “That would be Piper.”

Piper: “It was a strategic ankle‑biting device.”

Tinkerbell: “It was a cry for help.”

The leprechaun rubbed his temples like he suddenly understood why humans drink. Tinkerbell stepped forward with the confidence of a Southern grandmother about to negotiate a discount at Hobby Lobby.

Tinkerbell: “Sir, we’d like to offer you employment.”

Leprechaun: “Employment. As what.”

Coco: “Our butler.”

Piper: “Treat butler.”

Leprechaun: “I beg yer pardon.”

Tinkerbell: “You have thumbs. We don’t. It’s simple economics.”

The leprechaun stared at them like he was reconsidering the entire concept of magic. He made a run for it. Unfortunately for him, Piper also made a run for it. And she runs like a Roomba possessed by the Holy Spirit. She launched herself off the couch. Skidded across the hardwood. And slammed into the leprechaun like a furry bowling ball.

Leprechaun: “Lord above, get this creature off me!”

Piper: “I got him! I got the gold man!”

Tinkerbell: “Piper, release the hostage.”

Piper: “No. he’s mine!”

Coco: “Girl, you can’t just claim people like coupons.”

Once the leprechaun was upright again (and Piper was placed in a time‑out behind a baby gate), Tinkerbell attempted diplomacy.

Tinkerbell: “We don’t want to harm you. We simply want your gold.”

Leprechaun: “Absolutely not.”

Coco: “Okay, then we want your thumbs.”

Leprechaun: “Absolutely not.”

Piper: from behind the gate “I want his ankles.”

Tinkerbell: “Ignore her. She’s… spirited.”

After twenty minutes of arguing, bribery attempts, and Piper trying to chew through the baby gate like a raccoon, the leprechaun finally sighed.

Leprechaun: “Fine. I’ll give ye one coin if ye promise to never summon me again.”

Coco: “Deal.”

Tinkerbell: “Agreed.”

Piper: “Can I bite it to make sure it’s real?”

Leprechaun: “NO.”

He tossed the coin onto the rug, muttered something in Gaelic that I’m pretty sure was a curse, and vanished in a puff of glitter. Piper immediately tried to eat the coin. So now my cats have one magical gold coin, no butler, no thumbs, and  a restraining order from the leprechaun realm. Disasters. Tinkerbell is drafting an apology letter to Ireland. Coco is Googling “how to invest one coin in crypto” Piper is behind a baby gate screaming, “I won the war!” And me? I’m just trying to drink my coffee in peace while living with three furry agents of chaos who almost started an international incident with the Fae.

And that, dear readers, is how my cats managed to terrify a magical creature, negotiate absolutely nothing, and still walk away with a gold coin that Piper immediately tried to swallow like it was communion. The leprechaun vanished in a puff of glitter, probably filing a complaint with the. The leprechaun vanished in a puff of glitter, probably filing a complaint with whatever Fae Department of Magical handles “feline‑related incidents.” is researching “how to retire on one coin.” Piper is behind a baby gate screaming, “I am the chosen one!” And me I’m just trying to figure out how to explain this to my therapist without getting put on a watchlist.

Don’t you worry. Part Three is on the way and trust me. The glitter storm hasn’t even peaked yet. Backup is on the way, and Piper is about to discover what consequences feel like. Stay tuned. Thanks for reading! Keep smiling.

Affirmation: I handle unexpected visitors with grace, unlike my cats who handle them with teeth.

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

#ThisPuzzledLife

Operation: Irish Extraction  The Great Leprechaun Capture Mission

“If you hear screaming, it’s either a leprechaun or me realizing my cats have a plan.”

-This Puzzled Life

Light the candles. Hide the valuables. Say a prayer for the drywall. Today’s blog begins with a level of chaos I did NOT sign up for. My three cats launching a full‑scale military operation to capture a leprechaun, and I am simply a bystander in my own home. And they are treating it like a joint military operation, a church potluck, and a felony all at once. And that’s when I knew this day was going to require caffeine, prayer, and possibly legal representation. Welcome to St. Cat‑rick’s Day: Chaos Edition.

I walked into the living room this morning and found all three cats sitting in a circle like they were planning a coup. Piper had a shoelace. Coco had a clipboard she definitely stole. Tinkerbell had reading glasses on, which is concerning because she does not need reading glasses.

Tinkerbell: “Ladies, today we hunt for gold.” 

Coco: “And possibly a small magical man.” 

Piper: “Can I bite him?”

Tinkerbell: “This meeting is now in session. Our objective? Capture a leprechaun.”

Coco: “Alive. Preferably. But we’ll see how the day goes.”

Piper: “Can I eat him?”

Tinkerbell: “No. We do not eat magical creatures.”

Piper: “Then what’s the point?”

Piper jumped onto the coffee table, knocking over a candle and three of my remaining brain cells. She unrolled a crumpled piece of paper with her teeth. It was a drawing. A terrible one.

Piper’s Plan was to dig hole. Put leaf on hole. Wait. Bite ankles.

Coco: “That’s not a plan. That’s a felony.”

Piper: “It’s called strategy.”

Tinkerbell: “It’s called jail time.”

Coco strutted forward like she was presenting at a Fortune 500 shareholders meeting. She clicked a laser pointer at a diagram labeled: 

“OPERATION: IRISH EXTRACTION”

Coco’s Plan was to Lure leprechaun with Lucky Charms. Replace marshmallows with catnip. When he gets high enough to see God, we take the gold.

Tinkerbell: “Coco, that’s entrapment.”

Coco: “Correct.”

Tinkerbell cleared her throat like a professor about to ruin everyone’s day.

Tinkerbell’s Plan was to negotiate. Offer him a fair trade. If he refuses, unleash Piper.

Piper: “I bite ankles.”

Tinkerbell: “Exactly.”

After 45 minutes of scheming, Coco suddenly froze.

Coco: “Wait. How big is a leprechaun?”

Tinkerbell: “Small. Human‑shaped. Magical.”

Piper: “So, snack‑sized?”

Coco: “No, Piper. Focus. If he’s human shaped, that means he has thumbs.”

All three cats gasped.

Tinkerbell: “Thumbs… the forbidden fruit.”

Coco: “We can’t defeat a creature with thumbs. He can open doors.”

Piper: “He can open the treat bag.”

The room fell silent. This was now a national emergency.

Tinkerbell: “We don’t capture the leprechaun. We hire him.”

Coco: “As our butler.”

Piper: “Treat butler.”

Tinkerbell: “Exactly. We offer him a job in exchange for his gold and his thumbs.”

Coco: “And if he refuses…”

Piper: “I bite ankles.”

My cats are not catching a leprechaun. They are unionizing to recruit one. And honestly I’m afraid they might succeed. That, dear readers, is how I discovered my cats were running an unsanctioned military operation in my living room. I’m just over here trying to drink my coffee while Piper drafts war strategies in crayon. Coco files paperwork with an authority she absolutely does not have. And Tinkerbell sighs like she’s the only adult in a daycare full of feral toddlers.

If you think this story ends here, bless your heart. Because the leprechaun hasn’t even shown up yet. And when he does oh, honey. Part Two is coming, and it’s about to get louder, greener, and significantly more illegal. Stay tuned because the chaos is just stretching.

Affirmation: I am calm, even when my cats declare war on magical creatures.

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

#ThisPuzzledLife