Invisible Drones, Algae Shots & Cage Fights on the Lawn: America Has Officially Lost the Plot

“If the government wanted to distract us, they should’ve at least been successful at cleaning the pool first.”

-This Puzzled Life

 Light the charcoal. Sprinkle the sage. Tell the ancestors to bring EVERYTHING. Because today, we are grilling the latest chapter in the Trump Administration’s™ ongoing performance art piece titled: “What If Government, But Make It Walmart at 2 AM?”

My ancestors, who survived famine, war, plagues, the Great Depression, disco, and the invention of mayonnaise‑based salads, are hovering in the afterlife clutching rosaries, moonshine, and emotional support cigarettes. They whisper, “We did not cross oceans for this.” “We did not survive smallpox for this.” “We did not wear powdered wigs for this.” And yet. Here we are.

The White House lawn, sorry, the People’s Patch of Grass, has once again been transformed into a white‑trash UFC arena. Where sweaty men roll around in a cage like they’re auditioning for Magic Mike: Government Shutdown Edition.

The cage sits in the middle of the grass like someone ordered “UFC but make it emotionally repressed” off Wish. Tourists gather. Security pretends this is normal. And a lineup of men who look like they pre‑gamed with creatine, Axe body spray, and a quick scroll through Grindr. They begin stretching like they’re preparing for the world’s sweatiest Pride after‑party. Because nothing says “governing” like two shirtless dudes rolling around in a cage while America collectively whispers, “Is this foreign policy or foreplay?”

Piper: “Mother, why are the humans fighting in a metal box? Is this a mating ritual? Should we be concerned?”

Coco: “I’ve seen less homoerotic tension in a gay sauna on half‑price margarita night.”

Tinkerbell: “I’m only here for the snacks. Also, someone needs to drain that pool before it becomes sentient.”

And then, because absurdity must always escalate, the Trump Administration announces a fake assassination attempt involving Iranian drones that no one saw. No one heard. No one reported. And no one can explain. Because apparently even the drones were like, “Nah, we’re good.”

Suddenly, a man in a suit sprints across the lawn screaming, “THERE WAS AN ASSASSINATION ATTEMPT!” Everyone freezes. The fighters stop mid‑grapple. The tourists gasp. My cats blink.

Piper: “Mother, what?”

Coco: “By who? The drama club?”

Tinkerbell: “I bet it’s fake.”

And then the details emerge. The threat was Iranian drones. The drones were invisible. The attack was unconfirmed. The evidence was classified. The witnesses were busy. And the drones were never actually here. So basically, it was a crisis that didn’t happen. It was  reported by people who weren’t there. And it was involving drones that don’t exist.

Piper: “Mother, is this enrichment?” 

Coco: “This is why aliens won’t visit us.”

Tinkerbell: “I’ve had hairballs more credible than this.”

Meanwhile, the Reflecting Pool…

Once majestic. Now the color of a Shrek smoothie. Flaking blue paint drifting like sad confetti. A smell that says, “Someone dumped a bucket of hot dog water in here.”

Piper: “Is that algae?”

Coco: “Is that paint peeling?”

Tinkerbell: “Is that the symbolic decay of national integrity?”

Me: “Yes, girls. Yes it is.”

And the Trump Administration never misses a chance to monetize national embarrassment. They announce the newest grift called:

THE PATRIOT PACK™ -$250

  • One (1) clump of algae harvested by an unpaid intern.
  • One (1) authentic blue paint chip scraped by a man named Randy who definitely vapes.
  • One (1) certificate of authenticity printed on a Chili’s receipt.

All in honor of the 250th Celebration of America, which would make the Founding Fathers want to walk into the ocean. Fake their own deaths. Or rise from the grave just to say, “We didn’t write the Constitution for this.” My ancestors join in from the spirit realm, “We crossed oceans for this?” “We survived smallpox for this?” “We lived through powdered wigs for this?” Great‑Aunt Myrtle adds, “At least the men are pretty.”

Enter: Robert F. Kennedy, Jr.

Just when the chaos reaches peak humidity, a new figure emerges wearing flip‑flops, necklace of raccoon teeth, and the confidence of someone who once drank kombucha brewed in a boot. He steps up to a podium made of reclaimed pallets and emotional instability. He clears his throat. And announces, “THE REFLECTING POOL IS A MIRACLE.”

My cats freeze. My ancestors clutch their ghostly pearls. Tourists stop mid‑selfie. He continues, “This nutritious, peroxide‑infused, snake‑venom‑enhanced, algae is the future of American health.”

Piper: “Mother… is he okay?” 

Coco: “Absolutely not.”

Tinkerbell: “I don’t want whatever he’s on.”

He waves a mason jar of glowing green sludge like it’s holy water from the Church of Whole Foods. He declares that one 8‑oz glass of Reflecting Pool Algae™ can cure Ebola, depression, substance abuse, homelessness, addiction, dementia, low sperm count, cancer, mental illness, autism, low birth rates, AIDS, seasonal allergies, Hanta virus, screwworm, Covid 1-19, bad vibes, accidental or intentional snake bites, rabies from raccoons, and “the spiritual constipation of the American soul.”

Piper: “Mother, that’s not how biology works.”

Coco: “That’s not how anything works.”

Tinkerbell: “I’m still not willing to try it.”

And of course it gets worse. He also announces the algae’s potency is enhanced by “a micro‑dose of raccoon penile essence. Which was harvested ethically from raccoons who died of natural causes such as bar fights or eating fireworks.” My ancestors scream in Latin. Piper faints. Coco gags. Tinkerbell whispers, “I knew raccoons were up to something.”

Some people cheer. Some people vomit. One man tries to buy a gallon jug. Another asks if it comes in sugar‑free. A woman from Ohio asks if it’s keto. He assures them, “It’s paleo, keto, vegan, carnivore, gluten‑free, dairy‑free, guilt‑free, and spiritually orgasmic.”

The Trump Administration immediately embraces the miracle. They announce a national algae initiative. A Reflecting Pool bottling plant. A Raccoon Essence Research Grant. A Buy One, Get One Half‑Off Patriot Pack™ And a new slogan, “Drink Up, America.” My ancestors begin drafting a petition to be reincarnated as Canadians.

And the leader of our horrifically spiraling country, President Donald Trump, is the man that governs like a Roomba with a dying battery. In the middle of the chaos, the cage match, the algae sales pitch, the invisible drones, the raccoon‑essence wellness seminar, he decided it was the perfect moment to take one of his signature American taxpayer funded, mini-stroke, dementia public naps, which his staff insists on calling “extended blinking” or “patriotic micro‑rest cycles.” Cameras zoomed in as his eyelids began performing what can only be described as a slow‑motion garage door malfunction. They were fluttering like a moth trapped in a lampshade. Tourists whispered, “Is he meditating?” While my cats debated whether he was buffering. Rebooting. Or experiencing yet another mini‑stroke‑adjacent moment that his administration would later blame on “wind fatigue.” Piper tilted her head. Coco rolled her eyes. Tinkerbell muttered, “Mother, the man is power‑napping through the downfall of civilization.” And honestly? She wasn’t wrong.

At the end of the day, America doesn’t need algae smoothies, raccoon penis extract, invisible drone attacks, cage fights on federal property, or $250 commemorative mold. We need accountability. We need sanity. We need leadership that doesn’t involve drinking pond scum like it’s a wellness shot from Satan’s juice bar.

And no matter how many shiny, chaotic, homoerotic lawn events the Trump Administration throws at us, the American people have not forgotten about the Epstein files. Nice try, Donald! Charcoal extinguished. Cats disgusted. Ancestors filing complaints. Nation still watching. Thanks for watching! What do you think of the embarrassing events that was supposed to celebrate our country?

Affirmation: I am grounded. I am powerful. And I refuse to be gaslit by algae, drones, raccoon essence, or commemorative mold.

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

#ThisPuzzledLife

The Bitchuation Room: When “Love Thy Neighbor” Has Conditions

“My peace stays protected because I refuse to wrestle with hypocrisy. Especially when my cats can spot it faster than I can.”

-This Puzzled Life

Light the charcoal. Sprinkle the sage. Negative energy go away. Today we’re talking about conservative Christians who shame the LGBTQIA+ community while swimming in hypocrisy so deep they need a snorkel, a flotation device, and a word with Jesus Himself. And doing the spiritual equivalent of showing up to church with a flask in their Bible cover.

Piper has already put on her “I’m judging you but politely” face. Coco is pacing like she’s waiting for someone to confess on camera. Tinkerbell has taken one look at the hypocrisy and gone back to bed because she said, “Mama, I don’t have the emotional bandwidth for this.” If hypocrisy were a sport, half these folks would have endorsement deals. It is not ankle‑deep. It is not knee‑deep. It is baptism‑level immersion. Gather your spirit, your boundaries, and your emotional support snacks, we’re going in.

You ever notice how the loudest voices yelling “SIN!” are the same ones who have a secret second family. Or are having premarital sex that they condemn others about. They have a prayer request list longer than the CVS receipt. And a browser history that would make a demon blush? They’ll shame queer folks for existing. Then turn around and gossip so hard the angels have to put in earplugs. They’ll say, “We’re just protecting traditional values.” While their own values are out back doing donuts in the church parking lot. They’ll say, “We’re worried about the children.” While their children are on TikTok learning more compassion in 30 seconds than the adults have learned in 30 years.

Piper watches conservative Christian culture shame queer folks and whispers, “If hypocrisy were a spiritual gift, half these people would be apostles.” She sits on the arm of the couch like a bishop. She remembers the potluck of 2014. She knows who brought the store‑bought potato salad and lied.

Coco sees the hypocrisy and immediately starts knocking things off the counter. She says it’s “symbolic.” She says she’s “cleansing the space.” She says if one more person uses Jesus as a weapon, she’s flipping the whole table like it’s the Last Supper Reunion Special. And she is one tail flick away from staging a full‑scale revival.

Tinkerbell curls up in my lap and whispers, “If they spent half as much time loving people as they do policing them, the world would be healed by now.” Then she falls asleep because the hypocrisy exhausted her spirit. It hurts. I really does.

To be told you’re wrong for loving. To be told you’re broken for existing. To be told your joy is sinful while someone else’s cruelty is “righteous.” But the ancestors keep whispering, “There is nothing wrong with you. There has never been anything wrong with you. The problem is the mirror they refuse to look into.” And that mirror is dusty.

Piper says, “Judge not, lest ye be caught doing worse behind the fellowship hall.” Coco says, “Shame is not a ministry. But I can make it one if needed.” And Tinkerbell says, “Take a nap. You deserve softness.” And I say, “We will not shrink. We will not apologize. We will not dim our joy to make someone else’s fear comfortable.”

That concludes today’s sermon on love, truth, and the Olympic‑level gymnastics required to shame queer folks while ignoring your own mess. Piper has officially closed her Bible and whispered, “This ain’t what Jesus meant.” Coco is knocking over a decorative cross because she said the energy is fraudulent. Tinkerbell has curled up on my chest and declared the hypocrisy “spiritually crusty.”

Bless your identity, your joy, your pronouns, your peace, and your whole queer spirit. Because if conservative Christian culture insists on swimming in hypocrisy, then we’ll be over here floating in truth, glitter, and emotional freedom. And supervised by three cats who refuse to let shame win.

Affirmation: I walk in truth, joy, and glitter‑coated freedom. No shame formed against me will prosper, because my spirit is protected, my boundaries are blessed, and my cats will hiss at anything that tries me.

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

#ThisPuzzledLife

Things I Trust More Than This Administration: Queer, Southern, and Unbothered

“I’m not saying my life is chaotic. But even my sage asked for PTO.”

-This Puzzled Life

Light the charcoal. This is the moment that coal hisses. The ancestors lean in like, “Oh Lord… Dana ’bout to talk her talk again.” And the cats scatter like federal agents just pulled up in the driveway. And they should. This intro is hotter than Mississippi asphalt in July. And twice as disrespectful. Bless the yard. And hide your rainbow koozies. Because I’m about to say something that’ll make a Southern conservative clutch their pearls so hard they turn into diamonds. The smoke ain’t even settled yet and already my spirit guides are whispering, “Don’t hold back, sugar. Drag them like folding chairs at a riverfront brawl.”

The cats have formed a prayer circle. The neighbors are peeking through the blinds like they’re watching a tornado touchdown. And I’m standing in the yard with a rainbow apron and a spatula like, “Welcome to Pride, y’all. Let’s talk about trust. It sure ain’t coming from the administration.”

This ain’t just an intro. This is a front-porch sermon. A queer revival. And a Southern auntie prophecy delivered with the accuracy of a gossiping church lady who knows everybody’s business. It’s the version where Mississippi aunties, closeted deacons, rainbow‑flag‑waving cousins, and your one libertarian uncle who only shows up for barbecue all gather on the porch to say, “I don’t know what they’re doing up there in Washington, but it ain’t right.” And honestly? They’re not wrong.

Let’s talk about the things I trust more than this administration. Which is said through the lens of Southern conservative energy, queer resilience, and the chaotic truth of living below the Mason‑Dixon line.

1. A Southern conservative who says, “Now I’m not homophobic, BUT—”

At least I know what’s coming. Predictability is a love language.

2. The church fan with MLK on one side and a funeral home ad on the other.

That fan has been holding the community together longer than any policy.

3. The rainbow flag I hung outside that mysteriously disappears every June and reappears in the church lost‑and‑found.

Even the thieves have a conscience.

4. The deacon who whispers “I’m praying for you” but also slips me $20 for gas.

That’s bipartisan support.

5. The Southern mama who says she “doesn’t agree with the lifestyle” but will fight a senator with her bare hands if they try to take away her gay child’s healthcare.

That’s the kind of political complexity Washington could never handle.

6. The Pride parade in a conservative town where half the crowd is cheering and the other half is pretending they just happened to be walking by.

And yet it still runs smoother than federal operations.

7. The cat who judges my outfits but still shows up to Pride wearing a tiny American flag bandana like she’s running for office.

Piper 2028: “Claws Out for Civil Rights.”

8. The Southern conservative who says, “I don’t trust the government, but I trust Jesus and my tractor.” Honestly? Same.

9. The rainbow glitter that refuses to leave my floor.

It has more staying power than any administration I’ve lived through.

10. The HOA president who hates everything but still approves my Pride decorations because she’s scared of my grandma. That’s real governance.

Living queer in the Deep South means navigating a political landscape where people will vote against your rights at 9 a.m. Bring you a casserole at 11 a.m. And ask you to fix their Wi-Fi at 2 p.m. It’s a region where people say, “love the sinner, hate the sin,” but also “come get a plate, baby, I made extra.” Where the same person who says, “marriage is between a man and a woman” will also say “but y’all looked real cute in your engagement photos.” And somehow all of this still feels more stable, more honest, and more navigable than whatever the administration is doing on any given Tuesday.

May your charcoal burn steady. May your sage smoke be thick. May your boundaries be fortified like a Mississippi grandma’s chicken and dumpling recipe. May your Pride be loud and your joy be protected. And may you always trust the things that have never failed you like queer resilience, Southern contradictions, ancestral side‑eye, and the unstoppable force of a community that survives on humor, grit, and the ability to say, “bless their heart.”

And that’s why, at the end of the day, I trust my cats’ union bylaws, a drag queen’s wig glue, a conservative uncle’s “I ain’t sayin’ I agree, but I love you,” and the glitter that’s been stuck in my carpet since Obama’s first term. And it’s all more than I trust this administration. So, Let the rainbow flags wave high. Let the Southern conservatives keep pretending they “don’t get it” while secretly watching RuPaul’s Drag Race in 480p so the Lord can’t see.

Pride ain’t waiting on permission. Pride ain’t asking for approval. Pride is the mic drop. The finale. The fireworks. The testimony. And the whole damn altar call. And if the administration wants to catch up? They better lace up their boots, ’cause the queer South already left the porch. Thanks for reading! Happy Pride and keep resisting bigotry.

Affirmation: I move through this world like a Southern thunderstorm in June. It’s loud, dramatic, cleansing, and absolutely nobody’s business but God’s and the cats who witnessed it.

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

#ThisPuzzledLife

Dear Allies: The Gays Salute You With Both Hands And A Fan Snap

“I’m not saying I’m dramatic. But if God wanted me to stay calm, he wouldn’t have given me this much personality and this many conservative relatives.”

-This Puzzled Life

Light the charcoal. Today we’re gathering around the communal table to honor a sacred, undercelebrated, and deeply cherished group of humans. Our allies. The real ones. Not the “I posted a rainbow square once in 2020” crowd. Not the “I love you but don’t tell my pastor” crowd. Not the “thoughts and prayers for your eternal soul” crowd who clutch their prayer list so hard they leave dents.

I’m talking about the folks who show up when nobody’s watching. The ones who defend us without needing applause, cameras, or a political campaign ad with soft piano music and a bald eagle crying in the background. The ones who embody actual Christianity. The kind Jesus practiced before it got franchised. Monetized. And turned into a small‑town HOA with a pulpit.

Piper has already hopped on the counter and declared, “Finally. A blog about the humans who actually act right.” Tinkerbell is nodding solemnly like a tiny furry deacon. Coco is passing out imaginary communion wafers made of Temptations treats.

And me? I’m over here emotional because these allies, the everyday saints, remind us that our souls aren’t one color. Our souls are a rainbow quilt that is stitched together with joy, grief, glitter, and generational resilience. Humanity was always meant to be fabulous. Some folks just missed the memo while they were too busy policing everyone else’s salvation.

To our allies who stand up for us in grocery store aisles, family dinners, church parking lots, and in group chats where the bigots get bold. And we see you. You don’t do it for credit. You don’t do it for clout. You don’t do it because it’s trendy. You do it because your moral compass isn’t powered by fear, shame, or whatever Fox News is microwaving that day. You do it because you know love is supposed to be lived. Not legislated.

You do it because you understand that Jesus wasn’t white, wealthy, or sponsored by the pulpit politics committee. You do it because you know that if Jesus showed up today, half these conservative Christians would call the cops on him for wearing sandals and hanging out with marginalized people. You do it because you know the difference between performative faith and actual compassion. And the difference is louder than a praise band with a broken sound system.

Meanwhile, some conservative Christians are out here condemning queer folks by day and conducting their secret lives in the dark night of shadows like they’re auditioning for a low‑budget soap opera. Piper said, “Mama, the hypocrisy is giving mildew.” Tinkerbell added, “It’s giving spiritual swamp water.” And  Coco simply hissed and walked away. Honestly, they’re honesty felt like Scripture.

Tinkerbell (the eldest emotionally, the judge, the one who has seen things): “First of all, thank you to the allies who defend my mama like she’s the last biscuit at a Baptist potluck. Y’all are the reason she walks around this house with her shoulders back and her spirit moisturized. I watch everything from the top of the fridge. And trust me. The world needs more of you and fewer people who weaponize Scripture like it’s a coupon they clipped wrong.”

Piper (chaotic, believes she is a pastor): “I would like to personally thank the allies who understand that Jesus hung out with the marginalized. And not the HOA board of conservative Christianity. If Jesus came back today, half these folks would call the police because he looks ‘suspicious.’ And the other half would ask him to sign their Bible like it’s a meet‑and‑greet. But you allies would offer him a seat, a snack, and a safe place to rest. That’s ministry.”

Coco (the one who knocks things over for emphasis): “Thank you for clapping back at bigots with the precision of a cat swatting a glass off a counter. Thank you for knowing that love is louder than hypocrisy. And that closets are for coats, not people. Also, I knocked over that decorative cross because the energy felt off. You’re welcome.”

Piper (interrupting): “And let’s be clear. The allies who show up quietly and don’t need applause, y’all are the real disciples. Meanwhile, some folks out here preaching purity while living double lives that smell like unwashed secrets and expired communion juice.”

Tinkerbell (fanning herself with an imaginary church program): “It’s always the loudest ones who have the most to hide. But our allies? They’re out here living the gospel without needing to weaponize it. They’re out here loving people like Jesus actually instructed. They’re out here doing the work while others are doing theatrics.”

Coco (dramatically rolling onto her back): “Thank you for loving my mama in ways that make her laugh. Breathe easier. And feel safe. Thank you for being the humans she trusts. Thank you for being the reason she doesn’t hiss at the world like I do.”

And before this blog sashays off the stage in a cloud of glitter and righteous truth. My cats insisted, loudly, dramatically, and with the authority of three tiny elders, that they get the final word.

Piper (tail flicking like a church lady’s fan): “Thank you, allies. Without you, Mama wouldn’t have had the courage to build the life she has now. And without that life, we wouldn’t have our brothers. The chaotic, beloved, biscuit‑stealing boys who complete this household circus.”

Tinkerbell (paws folded like she’s about to deliver a sermon): “Y’all didn’t just stand up for Mama. You stood beside her. And because of that, this rainbow‑stitched, Southern‑chaotic, cat‑ruled family, exists exactly as it should. Our brothers are here because you helped create a world where love could breathe.”

Coco (rolling dramatically onto her back again for emphasis): “Thank you for giving Mama the safety and strength to choose love boldly. And because of you, we have brothers to wrestle, cuddle, judge, and occasionally blame for things we definitely did.”

To every ally who shows up without needing a spotlight, thank you. Thank you for representing the Jesus who loved without conditions, fear, or a PR team. Thank you for knowing that our souls shimmer in every color ever created. Thank you for standing in the gap when the world gets loud, cruel, or hypocritical.

And to the conservative Christians who are more performative than biblical? Your secret life is showing. And it’s not giving Beatitudes. Our allies are out here living the gospel without needing to weaponize it. They’re out here loving us in ways that heal generational wounds. And they’re out here proving that humanity, at its best, is a rainbow. 

All three, in a furry chorus of gratitude, “Thank you for helping build the home we nap in. The love we live in. And the family we purr in.” And with that, the cats have spoken. The rainbow has shimmered. The truth has been told. The gays salute you with both hands. A fan snap. And three very grateful cats. Piper has closed her laptop. Tinkerbell has said “Amen.” Coco has knocked over another decorative cross for emphasis.

And me? I’m ending this with a fan snap. A grateful heart. And a truth that cannot be dimmed. Real allies don’t just stand with us. They help us rise. Spirit moisturized. Rainbow restored. Thanks for reading! And Happy Pride Everyone Especially Our Allies! 

Affirmation: Today, I walk in my truth, glitter, and my God‑given audacity. I am loved. Protected. And too fabulous to be bothered by anyone who still thinks ‘rainbow’ is a political statement.

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

#ThisPuzzledLife

Glitter, Grace, Gay Rage, and the Feelings Police

“If catching gay were possible, I’d have turned half this town by now just by standing near the produce section.”

-Unknown

Light the charcoal. Sprinkle the glitter. Negative energy go away. It’s Pride 2026! And I just got a text from my red hat relative that said, “Praying for you during this difficult season of rainbow confusion.” Ma’am, the only confusion here is why you think Jesus would skip the parade. My neighbor just taped a sign to my mailbox that says, “We don’t hate you. We just hate your lifestyle.” Ma’am, the only lifestyle I’m living is hydrated, moisturized, and unbothered. Something your church potluck potato salad could never relate to.

Welcome back to This Puzzled Life, where the cats are dramatic. The snacks are questionable. And the Pride decorations mysteriously disappeared after my neighbor’s Bible study group “accidentally” parked in my yard. This year’s Pride theme? “Glitter, Grace, and Gay Rage.” And yes, the cats have thoughts.

Meanwhile, my cats are already in the living room holding a strategy meeting about which Pride float they plan to hijack. The engines roared. The asphalt trembled. And the red‑hat brigade clutched their pearls like they were auditioning for a Victorian fainting couch.

Tinkerbell: “That sound is freedom, Brenda.”

Piper: “I tried to hop on a Harley. They said no. I said ‘cowards.’”

Coco: “They look like they could fix a carburetor and my self-esteem.”

The queens rolled by on a float shaped like a giant glitter‑encrusted Bible with a banner that read, “JESUS SAID LOVE EVERYBODY. Y’ALL JUST CAN’T READ.” My red hat wearing uncle gasped so hard he almost inhaled a sequin.

Coco: “Finally, someone with the confidence I deserve.”

Piper: “I asked one queen to adopt me. She said she already had three cats. I said ‘same.’”

And right as a queen in a rhinestone robe blew a kiss to a group of teenagers, one of the red‑hat ladies muttered, “This is how they turn kids gay.”

Me: “Sweetheart, if you could catch gay from a drag queen reading a book, half the South would’ve come out during library story hour.”

Piper: “Honestly, that would’ve solved a lot of problems.”

Coco: “Imagine thinking literacy is contagious but kindness isn’t. And calling other people “woke” while your leader is basically a tangerine influencer with two boyfriends.”

Tinkerbell: “Bless her heart. And by bless, I mean educate.”

Next, were the beautiful furries that lighten the mood. A neon wolf handed me a sticker that said, “You’re valid, babe.” A sparkly fox tried to pet Piper. Piper hissed. The fox hissed back. Mutual respect was achieved.

Tinkerbell: “They are kind, gentle creatures. Unlike the family values feelings police.”

Then came the leather community walking in polished boots, harnesses, vests, and enough confidence to power the entire parade without electricity. The conservative Christian red‑hat brigade froze like someone had unplugged their programming. One leather daddy walked past holding a sign that said, “CONSENT IS HOLY.”

Coco: “I like them. They mind their business and moisturize.”

Piper: “One of them winked at me. I don’t know what it meant. But I felt powerful.”

Tinkerbell: “They have better manners than half the people at your family reunion.”

Meanwhile, one red‑hat lady whispered, “This is inappropriate for children.” Ma’am, your child just watched a wolf hand out emotional support stickers. They’re fine. One of the red hats approached me and said, “We’re here to defend traditional families.”

Me: “Sweetheart, my family includes three cats, a vape pen, and a group chat called ‘Queer & Petty.’ We’re thriving.”

Coco: “She asked if I was saved. I said I was spayed.”

Piper: “I offered her a rainbow sticker. She recoiled like I was handing her a tax increase.”

Tinkerbell: “She tried to quote Leviticus. I countered with RuPaul. She had no defense.”

And then the girls decided about the importance of being happy in life. Here are their responses.

Piper: “I want lasers, snacks, and a fog machine that smells like lavender.”

Coco: “I want a float that plays Beyoncé and throws shade.”

Tinkerbell: “I want a float that offers hydration, affirmation, and a safe space for questioning squirrels.”

Just when the parade felt like it couldn’t get any more radiant, the Trans Joy Float rolled in. It was a shimmering, sky‑blue and cotton‑candy‑pink cloud of pure euphoria. The float glowed like someone had bottled sunrise and set it loose on wheels. Silk flags rippled in the air. Bubbles drifted like blessings. And a banner stretched across the top reading, “TRANS IS BEAUTIFUL. TRANS IS HOLY. TRANS IS HOME.”

The crowd erupted. They shouted cheers, tears, and hands over hearts. And our trans community seems to be the personal scapegoat of the red hat leader in our country this year. Even the furries paused their chaotic frolicking to clap.

Piper: “I want to live on that float. They have snacks and good lighting.”

Coco: “Those outfits are immaculate. I respect a community that commits to a color palette.”

Tinkerbell: “This is what liberation looks like. It’s soft, fierce, and unapologetically alive.”

A group of trans elders stood at the front, waving like royalty. Behind them, trans teens danced with the kind of joy that makes the air feel lighter. And in the very back, a trans man in a sparkly binder held a sign that said, “I survived. I’m thriving. Keep up.”

The red‑hat brigade tried to look away, but the float was too bright, beautiful, and full of life to ignore. One of them muttered, “This is confusing.”

Me: “Sweetheart, compassion isn’t confusing. You just haven’t tried it yet.”

Tinkerbell: “Bless her heart. And by bless, I mean educate.”

So, sprinkle the glitter. And tell your neighbor that Jesus fed people without asking for a lifestyle audit. Pride isn’t a phase, a parade, or a “difficult season of rainbow confusion.” It’s a declaration. A reclamation. It’s a glitter‑coated refusal to shrink that fills in the cracks of oppression. It’s Dykes on Bikes shaking the pavement. Drag queens blessing the crowd like queer clergy. Furries handing out emotional support stickers. The leather community teaching consent. And that’s better than half the churches in this zip code. And, finally, it’s the red‑hat feelings police losing theological debates to a cat in rainbow sunglasses. It’s my family that is chosen, furry, chaotic, and unbothered.

Piper: “If they don’t like it, they can look away. I’m queer, chaotic, and emotionally unavailable. Happy Pride.”

Coco: “Piper you are not gay. I’m not either. But I am petty. And that counts. But if they look away, I’ll make them look back.”

Tinkerbell: “Child, Pride is holy. Act like you know.”

And me? I’m hydrated. I’m moisturized. I’m queerly fortified. And I’m done explaining myself to people who think glitter is a threat. This is Pride 2026. This is my life. This is my family. And it’s me standing here in full queer glory. And watching people scream about “wokeness”, while their own orange‑tinted leader wears a full face of makeup. Which reportedly, he swoons over someone named Bubba. And keeps a communist‑flavored second daddy on speed dial. But somehow I’m the one who threatens traditional values. And if that offends you? Take it up with Jesus. He’s at the parade. Thanks for reading! Happy Pride!

Affirmation: I am unbothered. Uncloseted. And untouchable. I’m too hydrated for hate. And too holy for homophobia.

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

#ThisPuzzledLife

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

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

-This Puzzled Life

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

#ThisPuzzledLife

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

New Findings from the Feline Council on Cannabis Odor Awareness

“Fear only grows in the dark. Truth grows wherever someone finally turns on the light.”

-Dr. Maribel Hargrove, Historian of American Panic Culture

Light the charcoal. Sprinkle the sage. Negative energy, go away. We’re gonna need the air spiritually cleared before we unpack what the Feline Council on Cannabis Odor Awareness (FCCOA) has discovered this week. The Council has reconvened loudly, unprofessionally, and without a single permit. After detecting what they describe as “heightened human foolishness in the vicinity of cannabis odor.”

This emergency session began precisely at 3:17 PM(post‑snack, pre‑nap), when Piper declared, “Something smells dramatic.” And Coco confirmed it was not the air fryer this time. Tinkerbell, already exhausted by the state of humanity, simply adjusted her posture into “formal judgment mode.” Which is legally recognized in three Southern counties as a public warning.

What follows is their official press release. It has been compiled through rigorous sniff‑based research. Counter‑top trespassing. And the kind of slow blinking that suggests they know more than the CDC, the FDA, and your mee-maw combined. Brace yourself. The cats have spoken. And as always, they did not come to play. They came to clarify, correct, and clown.

Let’s discuss some of the myths and facts surrounding cannabis.

1. Y MYTH: “Cannabis turns people into violent, jazz‑obsessed criminals.” 

Source of the nonsense: Reefer Madness (1936), Harry Anslinger’s speeches, and sensationalist newspapers of the era.

REALITY: Modern research shows cannabis is notlinked to violent behavior, crime waves, or moral collapse. Sources:

2. 26th my YTHt: “Cannabis destroys communities.”

Source of the nonsense: 20th‑century political rhetoric, especially during the War on Drugs.

REALITY: Criminalization, not cannabis, devastated communities through targeted policing and mass incarceration.

Source: ACLU racial disparity report: https://www.aclu.org/report/tale-two-countries-racially-targeted-arrests-era-marijuana-reform (aclu.org in Bing).

3. MYTH: “Cannabis has no medical value.” 

Source of the nonsense: Federal classification under Schedule I.

REALITY: Cannabis has documented medical benefits for pain, nausea, epilepsy, and more. 

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

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

4. MYTH: “Legalization leads to chaos.” 

Source of the nonsense: Politicians who still think Reefer Madness was a documentary.

REALITY: Legal states show stable or reduced crime rates, increased tax revenue, and safer regulated products. 

Source: Congressional Research Service: https://crsreports.congress.gov/product/pdf/R/R44782(crsreports.congress.gov in Bing).

OFFICIAL PRESS RELEASE

From the Feline Council on Cannabis Odor Awareness (FCCOA)

For Immediate Release Petal, Mississippi, Issued at 3:17 PM, right after snack time.

The Feline Council on Cannabis Odor Awareness (FCCOA), consisting of esteemed members Piper, Coco, and Tinkerbell. And has concluded an emergency meeting (held on the kitchen counter despite repeated human objections) to address ongoing public confusion regarding the smell of cannabis.

After extensive research. Which includes sniffing the air. Blinking slowly. And knocking unrelated objects off flat surfaces. The Council has reached the following conclusions:

1. Cannabis smoke does not kill humans.

Piper would like to state, for the record, that if a smell could kill you, “Mama would’ve been gone the first time she burned a grilled cheese.”

2. Humans dramatically overestimate their fragility.

Tinkerbell, the Council’s Senior Analyst in Dignified Judgment, reports, “If humans can survive Axe body spray, they can survive this.”

3. Complaints about cannabis odor are 87% performative.

Coco conducted a field study by sitting directly in front of the air fryer for 14 minutes. She survived. She then concluded, “Y’all will be fine.”

4. Gas masks are optional but hilarious.

The Council supports any human who wishes to parade around town in a gas mask to avoid the smell of a plant. Piper encourages this behavior because “it adds enrichment to my day.”

5. Reefer Madness was nonsense.

All three cats unanimously voted that the 1936 propaganda film was “Poorly acted. Factually incorrect. And severely lacking in treats.”

Official Statement from the Council:

“We survived the lies. You can survive the smoke.”

The Feline Council on Cannabis Odor Awareness will reconvene after dinner or whenever someone opens a bag that might contain snacks.

Established: Sometime between breakfast and second breakfast

Headquarters: Wherever the sunbeam hits the floor

Motto: “We sniff. We judge. We report.”

The Feline Council on Cannabis Odor Awareness (FCCOA) is a prestigious, self‑appointed governing body formed by three highly qualified household experts.

  • Piper- Director of Chaotic Field Research Specializes in knocking objects off counters to test gravity. Human patience. And the structural integrity of lies.
  • Coco- Senior Analyst of Smells, Snacks, and Overreactions Known for her groundbreaking study: “If I Can Sit in Front of the Air Fryer and Live, So Can You.”
  • Tinkerbell- Chairwoman of Dignified Oversight and Side‑Eye Oversees all operations with the grace of a Victorian widow and the judgment of a Southern auntie who knows your business before you do.

Mission Statement

The FCCOA is dedicated to combating misinformation about cannabis odor. Promoting scientific sniff‑based research. And reminding humans that a smell cannot kill you. But dramatic overreactions might.

Core Beliefs

  • Cannabis smoke is not lethal.
  • Humans are dramatic.
  • Gas masks are optional but entertaining.
  • Reefer Madness was a comedy, not a documentary.
  • Snacks should be distributed hourly.

Funding

The FCCOA is funded entirely through stolen chicken nuggets. Emotional manipulation. And the human’s inability to say no to cute faces.

Public Notice

The FCCOA will continue monitoring cannabis odor events and issuing statements as needed. Unless distracted by a bug, a crinkly bag, or the sound of the treat jar.

Before we wrap this up, my cats insisted I include their official statement on the matter. Apparently they have something to say about Reefer Madness too.

Piper, after hearing that people once believed cannabis smoke could kill you on contact. She simply blinked twice. Knocked a cup off the counter. And walked away like, “If a smell could kill you, Mama would’ve been gone years ago.”

Coco said she doesn’t understand the panic. Because she’s been sitting directly in front of burning candles, incense, and the air fryer her whole life. And has yet to perish. Her exact quote: “If y’all can survive Axe body spray. You can survive this.”

Tinkerbell, the dignified one, just sighed and added, “Reefer Madness was clearly written by someone who has never lived with humans. They panic over everything.” And honestly? They’re not wrong.

And with that, the Feline Council on Cannabis Odor Awareness hereby adjourns. Mostly because someone opened a crinkly bag in the next room. And Coco has declared it a Code Orange Snack Emergency. Piper has already left the meeting to investigate “suspicious crumbs.” And Tinkerbell is retiring to her sunbeam. And to contemplate why humans insist on panicking about smells, when they should be panicking about their own life choices.

But let the record show. The Council has sniffed. Judged. And reported. They have debunked 90 years of nonsense with nothing but whiskers, audacity, and a complete lack of respect for human hysteria. They have reminded us, yet again, that fear is loud. But truth is patient. And occasionally covered in cat hair.

Now go forth in clarity, humor, and the light you create. Preferably after distributing snacks hourly, as mandated by the Council’s bylaws. Thanks for reading! Keep blazin’ the devil’s lettuce.

Affirmation: I walk in truth, not fear. I release old lies, breathe in clarity and stand unshaken in the light I create.

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

#ThisPuzzledLife

The Raccoon Tallywacker Scandal That Ruined My Road Trip

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

-This Puzzled Life

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Me: “That’s what the article said.”

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

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

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

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

Me: “Apparently for research.”

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

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

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

Me: “Same, baby.”

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

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

Me: “Honestly? Same.”

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Coco: “Facts.”

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

#ThisPuzzledLife

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