“You can’t heal in the same environment that taught you to hide your wounds. Sometimes the bravest thing you’ll ever do iswalk away from the place that expected you to stay broken.”
-This Puzzled Life
Light the charcoal. Sprinkle the sage. Apparently, healing requires both barbecue energy and spiritual pest control. Welcome back to my household. Where the cats run the HOA. The ancestors run the commentary. And I’m just trying to unlearn 30 years of “bless your heart and keep suffering quietly.” Today’s sermon is titled, “You Cannot Heal in the Same Environment That Hurt You.” And yes, the cats have notes.
You ever try to heal in the same place that taught you to pretend everything was fine? It’s like trying to detox from sugar while sitting inside a Krispy Kreme with the “Hot Now” sign glowing like the gates of temptation. Meanwhile, my Southern upbringing is in the corner whispering, “Well now, you can leave, but don’t you dare make a scene. And take this casserole so folks don’t think you’re ungrateful.”
Healing in the same environment that hurt you is basically a full‑contact sport. You’re dodging old triggers. Outdated expectations. And that one relative who still thinks therapy is “for people who don’t pray hard enough. And still thinks Obama personally raised your rent.” Nothing says emotional clarity like feline commentary.m

Coco (the judgmental one): “Girl, you keep trying to heal in the same room where your trauma sleeps. Move the furniture or move yourself.”
Piper (the chaotic one): “I say we knock everything off the shelves and start fresh. Healing begins with destruction.”
Tinkerbell (the Southern belle of the group): “Bless your heart. Even Jesus left Nazareth.”
And honestly, they’re right. Cats don’t stay in places that stress them out. They relocate with the confidence of a woman who knows she’s too good for this nonsense.
Southern Conservative Truth #1
“If it ain’t working, you don’t fix it. You replace it.” This applies to lawn chairs, husbands, and emotional environments.
Southern Conservative Truth #2
“You can’t grow tomatoes in poisoned soil.” But you can grow generational trauma if you keep watering it.
Southern Conservative Truth #3
“If the dog keeps biting you, stop blaming the dog and fix the fence.” Stop expecting people who hurt you to suddenly develop character.
Southern Conservative Truth #4
“You can’t sit on a broken chair and then get mad when you hit the floor.” If the environment is unstable, your healing will be too.
Southern Conservative Truth #5
“If the chicken’s burnt, the oven ain’t gonna apologize.” Some folks will never take accountability. Move on.
Southern Conservative Truth #6
“You can’t plant hope in a field full of denial and expect a harvest.” Healing requires fertile ground. Not family members who think boundaries are disrespectful.
Southern Conservative Truth #7
“If the swamp keeps producing gators, stop acting surprised when you get bit.” Patterns are patterns, not mysteries.
And of course, the cats had to weigh in again.
Coco: “Humans love staying in toxic places because they’re sentimental. Cats leave because we’re smart.”
Piper: “If the vibes are off, I’m gone. No explanation. No forwarding address.”
Tinkerbell: “A lady does not heal where she was harmed. She relocates with grace and a fresh can of Fancy Feast.”
Here’s the truth they don’t stitch on pillows. You cannot heal in the same environment that taught you to shrink, hush, or swallow your own voice like it was impolite to exist. You cannot bloom in soil that resents your roots. You cannot rise in a room built to keep you small. And you sure as hell cannot become your highest self in a place that only wanted the quiet, obedient version of you.
Healing requires space. Not the kind of space where you shove your feelings into a Tupperware container and label it “Later.” I mean real space. The kind where you can breathe without hearing echoes of who you used to be. Healing requires distance. Healing requires disruption. Healing requires the courage to walk away from the familiar and toward the version of you that refuses to die in the same cage she was born in.
Sometimes that means leaving the room. Sometimes that means leaving the house. Sometimes that means leaving the whole dang ZIP code. And sometimes it means telling your inner Southern critic, “No ma’am, we are not staying here out of politeness.” Healing requires new air, new light, new boundaries, and sometimes, a new porch to sit on while you process your life choices.
Leaving the environment that hurt you isn’t betrayal. It’s survival. It’s reclamation. It’s the moment you decide your healing deserves better than the bare minimum. And if anyone has a problem with it. Just tell them the cats said you’re unavailable for nonsense until further notice. And that’s on healing. Now excuse me while I sage the house like I’m trying to smoke out a demon.
So let them talk. Let them misunderstand you. Let them clutch their church bulletin and call it rebellion. Let them say you’ve changed. Because God knows you have. And thank goodness for that. You are not obligated to stay where your spirit was suffocated. You are not required to keep shrinking to fit the room. You are allowed to outgrow the places that could not love you whole.
And if anyone has a problem with your healing journey, tell them, “I didn’t leave because I was angry. I left because I was finally ready to breathe. And once you taste oxygen, you don’t go back to drowning.” Thanks for reading! And stop shrinking for their comfort.
Affirmation: I honor my healing by choosing spaces that honor me. I release the rooms that dimmed my light. And I rise in environments that celebrate my growth, my boundaries, and my becoming.
***Don’t forget to watch the video!***
#ThisPuzzledLife








