The Stars, The Stripes & The Cats Who Won’t Let Freedom Fall Off the Counter 7.4

“Cats understand Independence Day better than anyone. They’ve been declaring freedom from authority since the moment they opened their eyes.”

 — Tinkerbell, Level‑Headed Elder Stateswoman of the Living Room

Down here in the Deep South, July 4th isn’t just a date on a calendar. It’s a full-bodied experience, a cultural thunderclap, a reminder that freedom has always been loud, messy, and worth fighting for. The humidity is thick enough to baptize you, the mosquitoes are running a coordinated military campaign, and someone’s uncle is always one sparkler away from a cautionary tale. The air also gets thick enough to chew, the cicadas start hollerin’ like they’re running for office. And the whole world smells faintly of barbecue.

And right in the middle of this Southern symphony, my three cats. But inside my house, another sacred tradition unfolds. Piper, Coco, and Tinkerbell gather for their annual Independence Day Democracy Summit. This year’s theme: “Freedom, Fireworks, and the Big Orange Cat Who Keeps Testing the Constitution.”

Piper, Coco, and Tinkerbell gather like a furry constitutional convention. Piper arrives dressed as Miss Firecracker, Coco shows up ready to filibuster for snacks, and Tinkerbell takes her seat like the level‑headed elder stateswoman she is, prepared to keep the republic intact with nothing but patience and a well‑timed sigh. Because in this house, democracy isn’t an abstract idea. It’s alive, it’s chaotic, and it’s covered in cat hair.

Piper (Miss Firecracker, vibrating with patriotic energy): “Okay y’all, HISTORY TIME! A long, long time ago, before Temptations treats existed, America was just a bunch of humans living under a big boss called a king.”

Coco: “A king who didn’t even live here. Imagine someone in another house telling us when we can eat snacks. Couldn’t be me.”

Tinkerbell (level‑headed, adjusting her tiny bow):“The colonies were under British rule. They paid taxes but had no say in the laws. It was undemocratic and unsustainable.”

Piper: “Exactly! So, the humans said, “We’re tired of this nonsense!” And BOOM! They wrote the Declaration of Independence.”

Coco: “Basically a breakup letter with extra drama.”

Tinkerbell: “A foundational document asserting that people have rights consisting of life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.”

Piper: “And snacks! Don’t forget snacks!”

Tinkerbell: “Snacks were not mentioned.”

Coco: “They were implied.”

Piper: “Anyway, they sent that letter to the king, and he was mad. But the humans stood their ground, fought a whole war, and eventually formed a new country based on democracy.”

Tinkerbell: “A system where power comes from the people, not one big boss.”

Coco: Unless the Big Orange Cat gets his way.

Piper: “Not on my watch! Miss Firecracker protects the Constitution!”

Tinkerbell: “Lord help us all.”

Piper (the baby patriot, dressed as Miss Firecracker): “BOOM! I’m ready to defend democracy, y’all!”

She’s wearing a red‑white‑and‑blue tutu, a sparkly sash that says MISS FIRECRACKER, and enough enthusiasm to power a Waffle House at 3 a.m.

Coco (the chaos middle child): “I move that we begin with snacks. Preferably the crunchy ones.”

Tinkerbell (the level‑headed elder stateswoman):“Let’s maintain order. And dignity. And maybe not set anything on fire this year.”

Me: “Tinkerbell, sweetheart, that’s a big ask.”

Piper: “Anyway, they sent that letter to the king, he got mad, a whole war happened, and eventually the humans formed a new country based on democracy.”

1. “Freedom means sparkles, snacks, and yelling ‘YEEHAW!’ at sunrise.” — Piper, Miss Firecracker

Piper believes the Founding Fathers would’ve loved glitter. Fireworks should be legal year‑round. And democracy is best defended by yelling loudly and wearing sequins. She salutes the ceiling fan. “For America and snacks!”

2. “Democracy is like a potluck. Everyone brings something. Even if it’s a mess.” — Coco

Coco explains that everyone gets a voice. Nobody knows what’s happening. And someone always starts a fight over the deviled eggs. She knocks over a mason jar of sweet tea to demonstrate “institutional fragility.”

3. “Freedom requires responsibility. And someone has to keep these two from burning the house down.” — Tinkerbell

Tinkerbell believes that democracy is sacred. Rules matter. Piper should not be allowed near fireworks, matches, or anything labeled “flammable.”

She adjusts her tiny patriotic bow and sighs like a Southern grandmother who’s seen too much.

Piper: “The Big Orange Cat is trying to take over everything.”

Coco: “He keeps knocking over the Constitution like it’s a roll of toilet paper.”

Tinkerbell: “He’s dismantling democracy one paw swipe at a time. It’s undignified.”

They list his alleged offenses such as he’s sitting on the separation of powers. He’s swatting at voting rights. He’s acting like rules don’t apply to him. He yells constantly. And he’s treating the Constitution like a scratching post. Piper stomps her tiny Miss Firecracker foot. “He’s a menace to freedom!” Tinkerbell nods gravely. “Bless his heart, but that’s not how governance works.” And after a heated debate (and one brief intermission where Piper tried to ignite a sparkler indoors), the cats issued their proclamation:

“Independence Day matters because democracy is fragile, freedom is sacred, and the Big Orange Cat cannot be allowed to treat the Constitution like a chew toy. We honor this day with snacks, naps, sparkles, and the courage to stand up for what’s right. Even if we’re tiny.”

Tinkerbell added a footnote: “Please supervise Piper at all times.”

July 4th reminds us that democracy takes all kinds. It accepts the firecrackers, the chaos agents, and the level‑headed guardians who keep everyone from blowing up the porch. And if Piper, Coco, and Tinkerbell can navigate constitutional crises with humor, heart, and Southern grit, the rest of us can surely manage one respectful conversation over barbecue.

At the end of the day, July 4th isn’t just about fireworks  or cookouts or who brought the best potato salad. It’s about remembering that democracy is a living thing. It’s a fragile, precious, and always one paw swipe away from chaos if we’re not paying attention. Piper may be tiny, Coco may be unhinged, and Tinkerbell may be the only adult in the room. But together they understand something deep, freedom takes all of us. The sparkly ones, the loud ones, the steady ones, and the ones who show up even when the world feels heavy.

So, as the smoke clears and the porch lights flicker on, we honor this day the way Southerners always have. With grit, humor, stubborn hope, and a fierce belief that the story of this country is still being written. And in this house, that story is guarded by three cats who refuse to let the Big Orange Cat scratch holes in the Constitution.

Because freedom matters. Democracy matters. And in this little Mississippi home, we’ll defend both with sparkles, snacks, and the kind of Southern backbone that doesn’t break, even when the world shakes. Thanks for reading! God Bless America!

Affirmation: “I stand in my power with the steady courage of Tinkerbell. The bold fire of Piper. And the unshakable resilience to rise above any Big Orange Cat trying to knock over my peace.”

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

#ThisPuzzledLife

Happy 250th Birthday, America! Please Stop Acting Like You’re Still in Your Rebellious Teen Phase

“I’m not saying my life is chaotic, but even my cats hold emergency staff meetings before waking me up.”

-This Puzzled Life

Light the charcoal. Sprinkle the sage. America just turned 250 years old. And  the ancestors, the cats, and the queer community all have something to say. Welcome to the backyard celebration where the grill is smoking. The humidity is judging us. And my cats have formed a bipartisan committee to review the last two and a half centuries of American behavior. Spoiler: the report reads like a Yelp review written by someone who did not enjoy their meal.

Tink, the union rep, conspiracy theorist, and the only cat who can quote the Declaration of Independence while knocking over a pitcher of sweet tea. She is pacing the yard like a Southern aunt who just found out someone brought store‑bought potato salad to the reunion.

Coco, the Sunbeam High Priestess, is perched on the porch rail wearing a magnolia crown. With a look that says she’s about to bless the food. Curse the government. And call on the ancestors in one breath.

Piper, the chaotic gremlin and Security Briefing Officer, is under the picnic table shredding a copy of the Bill of Rights. And it’s like she’s reenacting the Boston Tea Party. But with more attitude and fewer boats.

And me? I’m standing here with a spatula, a prayer, and the kind of patience only a Southern woman with humidity pressing on her soul can muster.

Let’s start with the part America keeps trying to whisper like it’s gossip instead of history. This land belonged to Native peoples. Sovereign nations. Ancient cultures. Communities with governments, languages, and spiritual traditions older than anything Europe could dream up. And from the moment colonizers arrived, Native people were met with violence, displacement, broken treaties, and centuries of injustice that still echo today.

Piper has already drafted a resolution titled, “Acknowledge the original landlords, sugar.”

Tink is lighting a candle for every Native ancestor whose story was erased.

Coco is chewing on a map as symbolism.

The Declaration vs. Today: A Southern Birthday Roast

1. “All men are created equal.”

Back then: a bold statement. Today: treated like the fine print on a Dollar General receipt.

And let’s be honest. It didn’t include Black people, Native people, women, or queer folks. We’ve been fighting ever since to make those words true.

2. “Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Happiness.”

Originally: a promise. Now: feels like trying to get a refund at Walmart without a receipt.

Tink is offended on behalf of the ancestors.

3. “No taxation without representation.”

Today: Representation that sometimes forgets who it’s supposed to represent.

Coco is chewing on a campaign flyer as symbolism and possibly a snack.

4. The Bill of Rights

A beautiful list of protections America treats like a potluck. Take what you want. Ignore the vegetables. And pretend the casserole section doesn’t exist.

Piper is muttering, “If they’d just read the whole thing, we wouldn’t be in this mess.”

America didn’t magically improve. It was dragged lovingly, loudly, and sometimes kicking by people who refused to sit down or shut up.

I’m talking about people like:

  • Harriet Tubman, who freed herself and then went back repeatedly to free others.
  • Frederick Douglass, who told America the truth with more clarity than any Founder.
  • Rosa Parks, who sat down so the nation would stand up.
  • Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., who turned civil disobedience into a moral mirror.
  • John Lewis, who taught us about “good trouble.”
  • Fannie Lou Hamer, Mississippi’s own, who said she was, “sick and tired of being sick and tired” and meant it.
  • Native activists, from the American Indian Movement to modern water protectors, who have fought for sovereignty and dignity for generations.

Tink has declared them the true Founders of America’s second draft.

And because America’s story isn’t complete without the queer community. Especially the ones who risked everything so future generations could breathe freely.

Our leaders were:

  • Marsha P. Johnson, who threw the first brick of truth.
  • Sylvia Rivera, who demanded that trans people not be erased from the movement they helped build.
  • Bayard Rustin, the strategist behind the March on Washington, whose brilliance shaped the Civil Rights Movement even as he faced discrimination for being gay.
  • Audre Lorde, who taught us that silence never saved anyone.
  • Harvey Milk, who insisted that visibility is power.

These leaders didn’t just fight for rights. They fought for the right to exist.

Piper has added them to the “Heroes Who Did America’s Homework For Her” list.

And while we’re being honest. America isn’t white. America is black brilliance. Native resilience. Brown creativity. Asian innovation. Pacific Islander strength. Middle Eastern wisdom. Multiracial beauty. Queer joy. Immigrant courage. And every shade, accent, and story in between. Color is what makes this country beautiful. Color is what makes this country possible.

Tink has declared this the official theme of the 250th, “Patriotism, but make it multicultural.”

Coco has declared the theme, “Snacks and diversity.”

Piper has declared the theme, “America is a gumbo, not a mayonnaise sandwich.”

Happy 250th, America! You’re messy. You’re dramatic. You’re full of contradictions, potential, and fireworks that definitely violate at least three county ordinances. But you’re ours. And we’re going to keep fighting, laughing, voting, boundary‑setting, and sage‑burning until you live up to the promises you made on Day One.

Because the Declaration wasn’t a suggestion. The Bill of Rights wasn’t a Pinterest board. And democracy isn’t a spectator sport. It’s a potluck where everybody better bring something besides complaints. May America’s next 250 years be less “Hold my beer” and more “Hold my principles.” And if not, don’t worry. My cats already drafted a backup government using crayons, glitter, and pure Southern audacity. Thanks for reading! And let freedom ring.

Affirmation: I am a whole miracle with seasoning. Not everyone can handle the flavor. And that’s their burden to carry, bless their heart.”

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

#ThisPuzzledLife

The Feline Farm Bill: My Cats Regulate Hemp Now

“Hemp is strong. Sustainable. And slightly less dramatic than the cats in this house.”

-This Puzzled Life

Light the charcoal. Sprinkle the sage. If we’re going to honor National Hemp Month, we need the ancestors, the angels, and at least three bored saints on standby. The spirits of Southern chaos have already begun circling the living room like they’re waiting for a casserole to come out the oven. The energy in this house is already vibrating like a Dollar General ceiling fan on its last screw. And Piper has been pacing the hallway like she’s waiting for a verdict from the Supreme Court of Snacks.

The moment the sage smoke curled upward, Piper burst into the room wearing a bathrobe she absolutely stole from the clean laundry basket. 

She spoke like she was about to deliver a prophecy.

Piper: “Momma, it is Hemp Month. I have prepared a statement.”

Before I could respond, Coco slid in behind her like a baseball player stealing home. She was holding a bag of Temptations in her mouth like a union negotiator arriving with concessions. She mumbled through the bag.

Coco: “I’m here in solidarity, And also because I heard hemp can be used to make rope. And rope can be used to hang treat piñatas.”

From above us, on top of the fridge, Tinkerbell let out the kind of sigh that only a cat who has read the Constitution twice can produce.

Tinkerbell: “You two are embarrassing. Hemp is an agricultural commodity with a nuanced regulatory framework. Not a snack-based holiday.”

Piper gasped.

Piper: “Everything is a snack-based holiday if you believe hard enough.”

And that’s when I knew that this intro needed to be fortified. This month needed to be fortified. I needed to be fortified. So, I sprinkled more sage. A little more charcoal. And maybe a splash of holy water for good measure.

If National Hemp Month is going to happen in thishousehold, I’m going to need the strength of industrial hemp itself. It’s flexible. Resilient. And capable of withstanding the absolute foolishness of three feline revolutionaries who think they’re about to unionize the living room. And that’s just the intro.

I swear. I was just trying to light a candle and mind my business. And Piper came skidding into the kitchen like she’d been summoned by the Department of Agriculture itself.

Piper: “We must prepare the house.”

Coco peeked around the corner holding a bag of treats like a bribe. 

Coco: “I’m just here to support the movement and also to see if snacks are involved.”

Tinkerbell: “Both of you are unserious. Hemp is a versatile agricultural commodity with a complex regulatory history. And you, she pointed a paw at Piper, are wearing a cape made from a dish towel.”

Piper: “It’s ceremonial.” 

I tried to explain that National Hemp Month is about education, sustainability, and celebrating a plant that has been misunderstood more than a Southern woman who says, “I’m fine.” Piper had already declared herself Hemp Czar and was marching through the house inspecting imaginary crops.

Coco: “Do hemp farmers get snacks? Because I’m willing to pivot careers.”

Tinkerbell rolled her eyes so hard I heard it.

Tinkerbell: “Hemp is federally legal, Coco. You don’t get snacks for following the law.”

Coco: “Then what’s the point?” 

Tinkerbell cleared her throat like she was about to read from the Book of Revelation.

Tinkerbell: “Under the 2018 Farm Bill, hemp was federally legalized as long as it contains no more than 0.3 percent THC. States regulate production through USDA-approved plans. And farmers must test crops to ensure compliance. Some states are stricter. Some are looser. And all of them are confused. Hemp is legal. But only if it behaves.”

Piper: “So if the hemp gets too excited, it becomes a criminal?”

Tinkerbell: “Yes. Just like you after 9 p.m.”

I tried to bring the energy back to something wholesome.

Me: “Let’s honor the plant. Let’s celebrate sustainability, fiber, textiles, and-”

But Piper cut me off.

Piper: “Momma, I have prepared a speech.”

She climbed onto the coffee table. Cleared her throat. And declared,

Piper: “Hemp is the fabric of our future. Also, I request a hemp hammock, a hemp scratching post, and a hemp crown.”

Coco clapped

Coco: “I second the crown.”

Tinkerbell stared at me like, “This is your circus. These are your monkeys.”

By the end of the night, Piper had drafted a “Hemp Bill of Rights.” Coco had eaten half a bag of treats in the name of activism. And Tinkerbell had filed three formal complaints with the imaginary Feline Ethics Committee.

And me? I blew out the sage. Looked at my household of furry legislators. And whispered, “Lord, give me the strength of industrial hemp to withstand the foolishness of this house.” Curtain closed. Hemp Month survived. Thanks for reading! Stay educated. What do you think about the current legislation regarding hemp?

Affirmation: “I honor the plant. Embrace the chaos. And stay grounded even when my cats form a hemp committee without my consent.”

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

#ThisPuzzledLife

Why Does The Gay Community Keeps Getting Treated Like The Federal Government’s Emotional Support Scapegoat?

“If drag queens were dangerous, the Pentagon would’ve hired them already.”

-This Puzzled Life

Light the Charcoal. Sprinkle the Sage. This is a queer survival sermon for a country that keeps missing the point. And also, a sermon for the people in the back. But first we need to spiritually fumigate the room first. The hypocrisy is thick. The contradictions are bold. And the political theater is so dramatic it deserves its own theme song.

Let the smoke rise like a Southern mama’s eyebrow when she hears someone say, “I’m not homophobic, but…” The “but” is always where the foolishness lives. And if the government spent half as much time fixing real problems as they do trying to regulate drag queens, pronouns, and who gets to pee where, this country would have free healthcare, affordable housing, a postal system that doesn’t lose your packages, and potholes filled with ethically sourced glitter.

But no. Instead, they’re out here acting like LGBTQIA+ people are a glitter‑powered militia plotting to overthrow the Republic with brunch menus and Beyoncé remixes. If queer people had that kind of power, the Capitol would’ve been redecorated in jewel tones and mood lighting decades ago.

Reason #1: We’re too fabulous to regulate

Bureaucracy loves order. It loves forms. It loves rules like “sign here, here, here, and also initial your soul.”But queer people? We show up like, “gender is more interesting than your filing cabinet.”, “no, I will not shrink myself to make you comfortable.” And “yes, this outfit is a political statement.” Trans folks especially break every boring little box the government tries to stuff people into. And nothing terrifies a bureaucracy more than a human being who refuses to be reduced to a checkbox.

Reason #2: Trans people expose the government’s worst fear. That identity is personal, not regulated

Trans people walk around every day proving that identity is self‑determined. Autonomy is real. Bodily freedom is non‑negotiable. And gender is not a federal highway with only two exits. That level of self‑possession shakes the table harder than a Pentecostal praise break.

Reason #3: We’re the easiest group to blame when they don’t want to talk about real problems

When the government doesn’t want to talk about healthcare, poverty, infrastructure, climate, wages, or why the DMV line is still 4 hours long. They go, “Quick! Hand me a queer person to blame!” It’s classic misdirection. It’s kind of like a magician. But instead of pulling a rabbit out of a hat, they pull out a bill restricting drag brunches.

Reason #4: The demonization is loud and the contradictions are louder

Let’s talk about the demonization of queer and trans people. The irony is so thick you could spread it on a biscuit. Some folks in the conservative political world will stand at a podium. Clutch a Bible like it’s a backstage pass to heaven. And declare that queer people are destroying America. And then turn around and behave in ways that would make a drag queen whisper, “Now baby, that’s between you and your therapist.”

It’s giving public morality, private chaos. And do as I say, not as I do. If hypocrisy were a sport, some of y’all would have Olympic medals.

Reason #5: Demonizing queer people while trying to sanitize harmful behavior elsewhere

Here’s where the sage needs to burn a little hotter. There’s a bizarre cultural pattern where some people loudly demonize LGBTQIA+ folks while simultaneously trying to downplay, excuse, or normalize harmful behavior in other areas that actually put children at risk. It’s the strangest double standard. A drag queen reading a book? “Danger!” Actual conversations about protecting kids from real harm? “Let’s not be dramatic.” It’s like living in a world where the smoke alarm goes off every time someone lights a birthday candle. But stays silent when the kitchen is actually on fire.

This contradiction isn’t about morality. It’s about distraction. It’s about misdirection. It’s about making sure nobody notices the real issues tap‑dancing in the background wearing tap shoes from Hobby Lobby.

Reason #6: Drag queens are too powerful

Drag queens have stage presence, community influence, sequins, microphones, and the ability to read a senator to filth without breaking a nail. The government knows if drag queens ever unionize, it’s over. The Pentagon cannot compete with a well‑timed death drop.

Reason #7: Queer joy is resistance

Queer people, especially trans folks, have mastered the art of joy in a world that keeps trying to dim them. That joy is political. That joy is rebellious. That joy is contagious. And nothing scares a system built on conformity more than people who refuse to be ashamed.

Reason #8: We don’t die quietly. We organize.

Every time the government tries to scapegoat the LGBTQIA+ community, queer folks respond with mutual aid, court challenges, community networks, fundraisers, marches, and a drag show themed “You Tried It, But We’re Still Here.” We don’t disappear. We get louder, smarter, and more fabulous.

Reason #9: We hold up a mirror 

Queer and trans people reveal truths about society. And these truths are, who gets protected? Who gets ignored? Who gets punished for existing? And who gets celebrated for conformity?

When you hold up a mirror to power, power tends to say, “Actually, could you put that mirror down? I don’t like the lighting.” And the moment power starts whining about the lighting, that’s when my cats kick the door open like, ‘Oh, you don’t like the reflection? Don’t worry. We brought a whole panel discussion and a ring light.’”

PIPER: I’ve called this emergency press conference because the humans are once again blaming queer folks for things they didn’t do. And frankly, I’m tired.

TINKERBELL: I have reviewed the allegations and found them to be stupid. Deeply stupid. Embarrassingly stupid.

COCO: I knocked a plant off the shelf this morning and nobody blamed the gays for that, so clearly the government is slipping.

PIPER: They’re out here demonizing queer people while ignoring actual problems. Meanwhile, I’ve been asking for universal basic treats for YEARS.

TINKERBELL: And the hypocrisy? Whew. They’re clutching pearls about drag queens reading books while ignoring harmful behavior elsewhere. The math ain’t mathing.

COCO: If they cared about children, they’d ban vacuum cleaners. Those things are TERRIFYING.

PIPER: Focus, Coco.

COCO: I am focused. Focused on justice. And snacks.

TINKERBELL: Motion to declare queer people fabulous and not the problem.

COCO: Motion to add snacks.

PIPER: Motions passed. Democracy lives.

COCO: Why do some people scream “protect the children” every time a drag queen opens a book, but go silent when real issues show up like uninvited relatives at Thanksgiving?

TINKERBELL: It’s giving “I don’t read, so nobody else should either.”

PIPER: It’s like yelling at a houseplant for being too green while ignoring the raccoon in the pantry.

TINKERBELL: The contradictions are louder than Coco knocking over a water glass at 3 a.m.

COCO: I knock things over for justice.

PIPER: And then there’s the “family values” crowd behaving like a soap opera plot twist.

TINKERBELL: If you’re going to preach morality, try living it for more than 12 minutes.

COCO: Twelve minutes is generous.

PIPER: In conclusion: Distraction. Deflection. Drama. And occasionally, pure comedy.

Let the last of the smoke curl around the truth they keep trying to hide. Queer people and especially trans folks aren’t the threat. We’re the reminder. We’re the proof that freedom is possible. We’re the living, breathing evidence that identity cannot be legislated into a filing cabinet. And that scares the hell out of systems built on control.

So the next time someone tries to blame the LGBTQIA+ community for society’s problems, smile sweetly and say, “Baby, if queer people had that much power, this country would be running smoother than a drag queen’s legs on pageant night.”  Sequins still sparkling.

Affirmation: I shine so brightly that even when power flinches at its own reflection. I stay rooted, radiant, and unbothered. My truth is steady. My joy is sacred. And no amount of misdirection can dim what was never theirs to control.

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

#ThisPuzzledLife

Piper, Coco, Tinkerbell & The Polyamorous Cat Situationship Running My Life

“Some relationships crumble under pressure, but mine thrive on chaos, cat hair, and three tiny supervisors yelling me into greatness.”

-This Puzzled Life

Light the charcoal. Sprinkle the sage. Before I tell this story, I need every ancestor, angel, and neighborhood spirit on duty. I’m about to confess about the only stable relationship I’ve ever had. It’s the only one that has never wavered, ghosted, or sent me a “we need to talk” text. And it is with three cats who yell at me like I’m their underperforming staff. 

The only stable relationship I’ve ever had is with three furry Southern elders who yell at me like I owe them child support. And at this point, I’ve stopped fighting it. I’m in a committed, long‑term, non‑negotiable situationship with three cats who treat me like the live‑in help at a haunted plantation house.

Every morning, I wake up in a relationship I didn’t choose but am absolutely committed to. It’s a polyamorous situationship with three cats who treat me like the live‑in help at a Southern gothic Airbnb. They yell when I move. They yell when I don’t move. They yell because the sun came up. They yell because the sun had the audacity to go down. They yell because I dared to think I had autonomy.

These are not regular cats. These are Southern elders trapped in tiny, furry bodies. They clock in at sunrise. Gather in a semicircle like a feline tribunal. And proceed to holler at me for existing incorrectly. Piper screams like she’s calling the family to the altar. Coco screams like she’s filing a formal complaint with management. Tinkerbell doesn’t scream. She announces like she’s reading the church bulletin. And I’m just trying to drink my coffee without being audited.

But you know what? They’re consistent. They show up. They communicate loudly, aggressively, and with purpose. They don’t play games. They don’t breadcrumb. They don’t disappear. They don’t “forget to text back.” They just yell. With love. And judgment. And a little bit of menace. That’s the healthiest relationship dynamic I’ve ever experienced.

I walked into my kitchen this morning like a woman with purpose. Only to be immediately screamed at by three cats who behave like they’re running a HOA for my soul. Piper hit me with the “you’re already failing” siren. Coco filed a noise complaint about my breathing. And Tinkerbell materialized like a Victorian ghost with opinions. And that’s when I realized that I needed to forget dating. My most stable relationship is with these tiny, furry supervisors who yell at me like I’m the intern they did not request but are now forced to manage.

Let me tell you something. People come and go, but these cats? They stay loudly. They stay judgmentally. They stay with the kind of emotional consistency therapists beg humans to develop.

Piper is perched on the counter like a disappointed cousin who just found out I’m dating someone with “potential.” Coco is the oldest but also the emotional middle child who has decided her full‑time job is yelling at me for things she imagines I did. And Tinkerbell is the Southern church mother of the group. She makes proclamations. She delivers sermons. She walks into a room like she’s about to tell me the Lord gave her a message about my life.

Piper doesn’t meow. Piper broadcasts. She has one volume. The urgent FEMA alert with one message, “You’re late.” Late for what? Feeding? Petting? Worship? I don’t know. She never clarifies. She just screams like she’s filing a complaint with HR. And the worst part? She’s right. I am late. I don’t know for what, but I feel it in my soul.

Coco wakes up every morning and chooses violence. She yells at me for walking too slow, walking too fast, not walking, breathing, breathing wrong, and thinking about breathing. She’ll stand in the hallway like a rotund, furry traffic cop. While screaming directions I cannot interpret. I’ll move left. She screams. I move right. She screams louder. I stand still. She screams in italics. This is the most consistent communication I’ve ever received in my life.

Tinkerbell doesn’t yell. She declares. She’ll walk into the living room, tail high, and announce something like, “AHEM. I have decided the sunbeam in the kitchen is now mine. Please adjust your schedule accordingly.” She is the only creature I know who can make me feel like I’m late to a meeting I didn’t know she scheduled. And she also judges my clothing. I’ll walk by and she’ll give me that slow blink that says, “Bless your heart, you tried.”

Let’s be honest: Humans? Unpredictable. Life? Chaotic. Mississippi weather? Bipolar. But these cats? These cats show up every day with the same energy that is loud, dramatic, and deeply committed to my emotional regulation through intimidation. They yell because they care. They scream because they love. They judge because they’re invested in my growth.

And I accept it. Because when the world is wild and the South is Southin,’ I know I can come home to three tiny supervisors who will absolutely yell at me for daring to exist. But who will also curl up beside me like I’m the only human they’ve ever chosen?

So, if you ever wonder why I’m single. Just know I’m already in a committed, long-term, emotionally intense relationship with three cats who scream at me like I’m late for a shift I didn’t know I had. At least they show up every day. And unlike humans, they will never leave me on read. Thanks for reading! And become a cat owner where the felines will hold you emotionally accountable through yelling.

Affirmation: I honor the loud love in my life. I am chosen, claimed, and hollered at by creatures who see my worth. 

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

#ThisPuzzledLife

The Gay Agenda, But Make It Catnip: A Household Report on Trump-Era LGBTQ Changes

“When the world starts smelling like political mildew, light the charcoal. Call your ancestors. And let the queer folk lead the way back to sanity.”

-This Puzzled Life

Light the charcoal. Sprinkle the sage. The energy in this house, and frankly, in this entire country, has gotten so funky that even my cats are refusing to walk through certain rooms without spiritual PPE.

I woke up this morning with my hair looking like a disgruntled possum. Before I could even sip my coffee,  the cats were holding a household meeting about “the state of the union.” Which is always a bad sign. Coco had a clipboard. Tink was already in the hallway wearing her imaginary reading glasses. Which were radiating the kind of disappointment usually reserved for people who microwave fish at work. Piper also whispered, “Ma’am, the political nonsense has reached critical levels. We need a blog post before Tink files a grievance.” She was chewing on the corner of a cardboard box like she was absorbing strength for the battle ahead. And she was also eating the minutes.

And here we are. I’m half awake. Half-caffeinated. Fully irritated. And spiritually powered by coffee and queer rage and fully done with the world. The cats, unionized and dramatic. The political landscape is acting like it needs to be put in time‑out with no tablet. And I’m ready to unpack the latest political nonsense like it’s a Walmart bag full of mystery items you forgot you bought.

Let’s begin. The cats have taken their positions. Tink is pacing like a union rep preparing for a strike. Coco is perched in a sunbeam like a disappointed CEO. And Piper is licking an outlet for emotional support.

Filed by Piper (Gremlin-at-Large), Tink (Union Rep), and Coco (CEO of Sunbeams)

Ladies, gentlemen, gays, theys, strays, and anyone who has ever been personally victimized by a legislative session. welcome. I, Tinkerbell, your local union rep and part‑time conspiracy theorist, have called this emergency press briefing because the humans are stressed. The news is chaotic. And the federal government has once again discovered a new way to make LGBTQ folks’ lives harder. And when the humans are stressed. We are stressed. And when we are stressed. Someone’s shower curtain is getting shredded. That’s democracy, baby.

Coco here. CEO. Visionary. Keeper of Warm Spots. I run this house. And I run it with dignity. That’s something certain political leaders could try sometime. Let’s talk about these changes that have been rolling out like a bad reboot of a show nobody asked for.

1. Policies targeting transgender people

Tink’s summary: “Why are they obsessed with people’s gender? They can’t even manage their own hair.”

From restrictions on gender‑affirming care to attempts to limit trans people’s rights in public life. The changes have been hitting the trans community hard. Tink’s official stance: “If someone tried to regulate my litter box access, I would simply bite them.”

2. Attempts to roll back protections for LGBTQ workers and students

Piper interrupts, “We in the Feline Union stand firmly against workplace discrimination. Especially discrimination that interrupts nap time.”

Some policy shifts have weakened protections for LGBTQ employees and students. And this is making it harder for queer folks to feel safe at work or school. Piper’s stance is, “If anyone tried to discriminate against me, I would scream at 3 a.m. Until they reconsidered their life choices.”

3. Changes affecting LGBTQ families and adoption rights

Coco says, “Imagine telling someone they can’t adopt because of who they love. Meanwhile, I’ve seen humans who can’t even keep a houseplant alive.”

Some policy changes have made it harder for LGBTQ couples to adopt or foster children. Coco: “We support all families. Especially the ones who provide snacks.”

4. The demonization of the LGBTQ community. Especially trans folks

Piper: “Oh, the irony. The same people clutching pearls about ‘protecting children’ are the ones passing laws that harm them.”

Some political messaging has painted LGBTQ people, especially transgender people, as threats or problems. Tink: “If anyone is a threat, it’s Coco when she hasn’t had her 2 p.m. zoomies.”

Piper here. I’m the emotional support gremlin. I don’t understand politics. But I do understand vibes. And the vibes are rancid. Let me tell you what I’ve observed. The humans are tired. The queer humans are extra tired. And the trans humans are tired, angry, and carrying the entire moral backbone of the country on their shoulders. And the cats? We’re eating plastic. And knocking things off counters in solidarity.

Coco’s official statement: “Stop targeting LGBTQ people. They’re fabulous. Also, give me treats.”

Tink (adjusting tiny glasses): “We stand with the LGBTQ community. We stand with trans folks. We stand with queer families. We stand with drag queens, bisexuals, nonbinary babes, leather daddies, sapphic aunties, and anyone who has ever had to explain their pronouns to a man who thinks Wi-Fi is witchcraft.”

Coco (basking in a sunbeam): “We reject policies that harm queer people. We reject discrimination. We reject cruelty. We reject anything that interrupts my naps.”

Piper (chewing a cardboard box): “We reject bigotry. And also, gravity.”

And that, my friends, concludes today’s episode of “Why Are Humans Like This?” starring a government that needs therapy. A household that runs on chaos. And three cats who have officially drafted a cease‑and‑desist letter addressed to bigotry itself.

Coco has stamped it with her paw. Tink has notarized it with a dramatic sigh. Piper tried to eat it, which counts as approval. Coco has filed the paperwork. Tink has approved it with a single judgmental blink. Piper tried to eat the evidence, which honestly feels symbolic.

Coco: “If the government wants to keep messing with LGBTQ rights, they should know this household is ready. We have claws. We have opinions. We have a gremlin.”

Tink: “And we have a human who writes like a Southern Shakespeare with boundary issues.”

Piper: “So consider this your warning. Stop targeting queer people. Or we will knock over everything you love.”

Let me say this with the clarity of a Southern auntie who has had enough. And also, loud enough for the ancestors, the neighbors, and the lawmakers who pretend not to hear. Queer people aren’t the problem. Cruelty is. And this household does not negotiate with nonsense. Queer folks deserve safety. Trans folks deserve dignity. And bigotry deserves to be escorted out like it just caused a scene at Applebee’s. 

This household stands with the LGBTQ community. We have claws out. The sage lit. The charcoal glowing. And Piper ready to scream at anyone who needs a reminder. The cats strut away like they just won the Miss America pageant. They exit the room in slow motion. With tails high. And theme music swelling. Thanks for reading! Happy Pride!

Affirmation: My spirit is steady. My boundaries are blessed. And my queer joy is non‑negotiable. No law, no headline, and no nonsense can dim the light I carry. Or the claws backing me up.

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

#ThisPuzzledLife

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

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

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