This Puzzled Life is a mental health and recovery blog exploring addiction, trauma healing, LGBTQ experiences, humor, and the strange moments that shape us.
Light the charcoal. Sprinkle the sage. Turn the thermostat down to “Don’t Play With Me.” Today’s story begins with Piper. She’s my overly chaotic, dramatic, emotionally unstable lead actress. She is waking up. Stretching her little diva paws. And declaring, “I live in a PRISON. A carceral state. A maximum‑security facility with no parole.” Why? Because I wouldn’t let her go outside at 8:03 AM to fight a butterfly. But then. I opened the door. And Mississippi humidity said, “Come here, sweetheart. Let me teach you something.”
Me: “Alright Piper, you wanna go outside? Go ahead.”
Piper(strutting like she’s leading a protest): “ I will taste freedom! I will breathe liberty! I will-”
The door opens. The humidity hits her like a wet spiritual slap.
Piper: “What is this? Why is the air touching me?”
Coco(from the hallway, eating an imaginary snack):“I told her. I told her. But she thinks she’s the main character.”
Tinkerbell (adjusting her invisible glasses): “Statistically speaking. She lasted longer than expected. I predicted immediate collapse.”
Piper takes one step outside. One. Single. Step. Her fur frizzes. Her soul leaves her body. Her whiskers droop like overcooked noodles.
Piper: “I am melting. I am being steamed like a dumpling. Call 911.”
Me: “Baby, that’s just humidity.”
Piper: “This is a hate crime!”
She turns around dramatically. Panting like she just crossed the Sahara.
Piper: “Let me back in. I have been assaulted by the sky.”
I open the door. She collapses onto the floor like a Victorian widow whose fainting couch was repossessed.
Piper: “I take back everything I said. This is not a prison. This is a climate‑controlled sanctuary of salvation.”
Coco: “Mm‑hmm. And next time you’ll listen to your elders.”
Tinkerbell: “Unlikely. She has the memory of a wet sock.”
Piper: “I have been traumatized. I need compensation. I need snacks. I need-”
Me: “You need to sit down and stop being dramatic.”
Piper: “I am a victim of the outdoors!”
And that is how Piper went from “I am an oppressed inmate” to “I would like to personally thank the HVAC industry for its service.” All in under 12 seconds. The South didn’t just humble her. It baptized her in sweat. Snatched her ego. And sent her home reborn.
I would like to personally nominate the air conditioner for the Nobel Peace Prize.” The South sautéed her. Seasoned her. And served her back to the living room like a damp little cautionary tale.
So, the next time Piper demands “freedom,” open the door. Let the humidity slap her with a warm, wet truth. And remember, “Sometimes the lesson isn’t deep. Sometimes the lesson is, “Get back inside before you melt.” Thermostat lowered. Ego evaporated. Thanks for reading! And praise be for air conditioning. Can you relate?
Affirmation: “I honor my boundaries, my AC unit, and my right to stay indoors. Where the air is cold. The humidity is low. And the cats are only moderately feral.”
“Back in the day might be gone. I’m still here. Creaking. Leaking. Laughing. And refusing to go quietly into anybody’s geological record.”
-This Puzzled Life
Light the charcoal. Sprinkle the sage. “Back in the day” has officially stopped being a cute phrase. It has started functioning like a geological timestamp. We are no longer dealing with nostalgia. We are dealing with archaeology. And while we’re gathered here, let’s honor another painful reality. My pelvic floor, which has resigned from its position without notice, severance, or gratitude for years of loyal service. I used to laugh. I used to cough. I used to sneeze with confidence. Now? Every joyful moment is a bodily gamble. And my cats are watching me like I’m a malfunctioning water balloon.
My bladder used to be a vault. Fort Knox. A steel‑reinforced bunker. Now it’s a screen door in a hurricane. One giggle? A sprinkle. One cough? A drizzle. One sneeze? A flash flood warning. Tink, the union rep, carries a clipboard labeled “Mama’s Moisture Incidents.” Every time I laugh too hard, she checks a box and sighs like she’s disappointed in my performance review.
Meanwhile, My Colon Has Entered Its Renaissance. I don’t know who gave my colon the confidence to act like this, but it’s out here freelancing. A sneeze? “Let me contribute.” A cough? “I have thoughts.” A laugh? “I brought snacks.”
Piper, the dramatic CEO, escorts me to the bathroom like I’m a VIP guest at a scandalous event. Tail high. Judgment higher. Coco, head of security, treats every cough like a breach. And every laugh like a full‑scale emergency. If I chuckle, she sprints over like, “Ma’am, did something escape? Do I need to file a report?”
My Body Has Entered a New Era without consulting me, my ancestors, or the household democracy. Now my cats circle me like I’m a congressional hearing titled, “What Happened To Mama’s Knees.” Aging is not gentle. It is not poetic. It is a jump scare.
Piper has drafted a formal complaint titled, “Mama’s Joints: A Concerning Increase in Snap,Crackle, and Pop.” Tink follows me around like a Victorian widow who just discovered her inheritance is gone. Every time I bend over, she gasps like I’m performing a dangerous stunt. Coco treats my memory lapses as suspicious activity. If I walk into a room and forget why, she escorts me back out like, “Ma’am, this area is restricted until you recall your mission.”
Nobody warned me that aging comes with random brain glitches. I’ll be mid‑sentence, mid‑thought, mid‑Southern‑monologue and suddenly, poof my brain throws up a blue screen like an old Dell computer. My cats stare at me like I’m buffering. Tink even tapped my forehead once like she was checking the Wi-Fi connection.
I used to move like a person. Now I move like a haunted rocking chair. Every step is a creak. Every stretch is a negotiation. Every time I sit down, I release an involuntary “old person exhale” that sounds like I’m letting go of trauma. And the cats judge with the intensity of Southern aunties at a baby shower.
My knees have officially submitted paperwork titled, “We Did Not Sign Up For Stairs.” They’ve requested a mobility scooter, a heating pad stipend, and a written apology for every squat I’ve ever attempted. Piper stamped it “Approved” before I even finished reading it. I dropped something on the floor. I looked at it. It looked at me. We both understood it was staying there. Coco sniffed it and gave me a look that said, “Wow. She’s gone.” I sneezed. Just one. A cute one. And my bladder and colon both said, “Tag‑team?” My cats stared at me like I had just lost a custody battle with gravity.
“Back in the Day” Has Become a Unit of Measurement. Once upon a time, “back in the day” meant five years ago. Now it means before three presidents, two pandemics, and the rise and fall of skinny jeans. Scientists have the Jurassic, Triassic, and Cretaceous periods. We have
Back in the Day (Early Period): When my knees still believed in me.
Back in the Day (Middle Period): When I could sneeze without filing an insurance claim.
Back in the Day (Late Period): When my bladder wasn’t a part‑time sprinkler system.
Even my cats treat “back in the day” like it’s a historical documentary. Piper says, “Which era are we referencing, ma’am? Pre‑creak or post‑snap?” Tink stares out the window like she’s remembering a lost lover. Coco waits by the door like I’m supposed to take her there.
A sediment of memories. A fossil record of who you were before your joints started sounding like porch furniture in a horror movie. It’s weird. It’s humbling. It’s hilarious. It’s a little holy. My mind may wander. But it wanders toward wisdom. My body may creak. But it carries stories. My memory may glitch. But my spirit is sharper than ever. And my cats, judgmental, dramatic, chaotic, they’re my witnesses, my companions, my furry little archivists of this new era.
I’ve had more surgeries than a Real Housewife. And my uterus didn’t just get removed. She angrily quit. If she had a LinkedIn profile, she would list my hysterectomy as, “Voluntary separation from a hostile work environment.” She walked out, slammed the door, and said, “Y’all figure it out.” My gallbladder left early. My appendix said, “I was never needed anyway.” My tonsils left before the chaos even started. Now it’s just me, my stitches, and three cats running a post‑op reality show.
Things That Now Count as Cardio include putting on socks. Rolling over in bed. Getting out of a low chair. Sneezing. Thinking about laundry. And walking past the mailbox. My Fitbit is confused. It thinks I’m training for a marathon.
Aging may be turning my bladder into a leaky faucet. And my colon into a chaotic intern. But I’m still here laughing. Coughing. Sneezing. Leaking. Creaking. And telling the story. If my organs want to leave, fine. But the comedy? The comedy stays right here with me.
This is my era, the Drip Drop Dynasty, and I rule it with dignity, humor, and a strategically placed bathroom. Back in the day might be gone. But I’m still evolving. Still ridiculous. Still holy. And still funny enough to survive the Renaissance.
Affirmation: “I honor this body, this era, this chaos, and this comedy. I rise today with wisdom in my bones. Fire in my spirit. And three judgmental cats who remind me I’m still unstoppable.
“Southern summers will test your patience, your deodorant, and your faith. But nothing melts faster than other people’s manners.”
-This Puzzled Life
Light the charcoal. Sprinkle the sage. The public body odor situation in a Southern summer has reached a level that can only be handled with spiritual cleansing, municipal ordinances, and maybe a pressure washer. We have reached that special time of year when the humidity is so disrespectful it feels personal. And the general public is out here smelling like they’ve been slow‑cooked in their own decisions. If you’ve stepped outside lately and thought, “Why does the air taste like somebody’s day?” Congratulations, you’ve survived another Mississippi summer morning.
There’s hot. And then there’s Southern hot. And it’s where the humidity sits on your chest like an unpaid bill. The moment you step outside, the air grabs you by the throat like, “You sure you wanna do this?” And the public? The public smells like they lost the battle hours ago.
We’re talking about these smells:
“I’ve been running errands since 8 a.m.” funk.
“I thought body spray counted as a shower” funk.
“I sat on vinyl seats in shorts” funk.
“I mowed the lawn and then went to Walmart” funk.
“I’m glistening, not sweating” funk (ma’am… you are sweating).
The South is humid enough to baptize you against your will. And yet somehow folks are out here smelling like they’ve been sautéed in their own regrets.
There’s a special kind of scent that only appears between June and September. It’s not quite sweat. Not quite despair. But a collaboration between the two. A duet. A remix. A limited-edition fragrance called Eau de Why Did I Leave the House? You can smell it in grocery store aisles, gas station lines, post office lobbies, any outdoor festival where someone brought a lawn chair, and the DMV (year‑round but amplified in summer). It’s the kind of aroma that makes you rethink your errands, your life choices, and your proximity to other humans.
We’ve all encountered these summer scent celebrities which include:
The man who jogged “just a little bit” but smells like he ran from the law.
The woman who swears she “doesn’t sweat,” while actively melting.
The teenager who believes deodorant is optional.
The person who got out of a car with leather seats and left half their soul behind.
And the festival goer who smells like they’ve been marinating in the sun since Thursday.
If we’re being honest, the South needs deodorant checkpoints. Public misting tents filled with cold air and accountability, a statewide ban on polyester. A “Shower Before You Leave Home” PSA campaign. And emergency cooling stations that are just walk‑in freezers. Because at this point, the humidity is not the only thing that assaults people.
If your personal aroma can be described as “interactive,” “memorable,” or “lingering,” please stay home until further notice. Summer in the South is already a full‑contact sport. We don’t need the bonus level of surprise scents.
And that’s where we are, folks. A region full of good-hearted people who smell like they’ve been marinating in a Crock‑Pot set to “Low and Regret.” Until deodorant becomes a civic duty and showers are treated like the sacred rituals they are, the South will continue to function as one big, sweaty, aromatic potluck of questionable scents. If your personal aroma has texture, stay home. Thanks for reading! And for God’s sake, bathe and use D-O for the B-O!
Affirmation: I move through this humid, chaotic world with grace, humor, and a scent profile I can be proud of. Other folks’ funk is not my spiritual assignment.
“If it smells bad, at least it’s not pretending to be leadership.”
-This Puzzled Life
The Light the charcoal. Sprinkle the sage. Let the ancestors pinch their noses and look away. Today we’re diving deeper into the olfactory underworld. We are not merely discussing stink. We are invoking it. We are calling forth the foul, the funky, the spiritually disrespectful aromas that have shaped us. Traumatized us. And strengthened our immune systems.
This is not a blog post. This is a ritual of olfactory truth‑telling. The realm of smells so violent, spiritually disrespectful, and chemically aggressive that OSHA would need a prayer circle. And yet. I trust every single one of them more than the current administration.
Piper has already climbed onto the counter like a tiny, judgmental priestess. While waving her paw through the sage smoke like she’s blessing the space. Tinkerbell is pacing the hallway like she’s preparing to testify before Congress. Coco is sitting in the corner with her eyes half‑closed, whispering, “Mother, the air is lying to us.” And She’s right.
When the world is full of institutional nonsense. Bureaucratic gaslighting. And leadership that smells like a compost bin in August. Sometimes the only thing you can trust is the honest, unfiltered, unapologetic funk of everyday life. So, gather your courage. Gather your nose plugs. Gather your cats if they’re willing. We’re going in. Here is a list of stinky things I trust more than the current administration.
1. The Diaper With a Personal Vendetta
This diaper is not merely stinky. This diaper is sentient. It has a backstory. It has unresolved conflict. It has seen the rise and fall of civilizations. And is now wandering the earth like a cursed relic. It smells like betrayal, hot milk, and generational trauma.
Piper: “Momma, that diaper has a stronger moral compass than the entire federal budget.”
2. The Litter Box Couple in a Toxic Relationship
These two litter boxes have been together for years. They fight. They reconcile. They break up. They get back together. They smell like resentment and clumping clay. One is passive-aggressive. The other is emotionally unavailable. Together, they are the most stable relationship in the house.
Tinkerbell: “At least they own their mess. Can the administration say the same?”
3. The Onion That Has Gone Full Demon Mode
This onion has sprouted tentacles. It has opinions. It has a five‑year plan and a side hustle. It smells like a root vegetable that has lost its faith. You don’t throw this onion away. You negotiate with it.
Coco: “That onion has transparency. I respect that.”
4. The Gym Sock That Has Survived Three Regimes
This sock is crunchy. This sock is haunted. This sock has been to war metaphorically and possibly literally. It smells like despair, ambition, and a middle school locker room.
Piper: “That sock has done more for this country than the administration.”
5. The Trash Can You Forgot During a Heat Wave
This trash can smells like sin. It smells like regret. It smells like a decision you made at 2 a.m. that still haunts you. It has its own gravitational pull.
Tinkerbell: “At least the trash knows it’s trash. And doesn’t require a newly purchased jet to function.”
6. The Forgotten Tupperware in the Back of the Fridge
You know the one. You don’t open it. You don’t touch it. You don’t even look directly at it. It contains a life form that has achieved consciousness and is now applying for citizenship.
Coco: “That Tupperware has accountability. Revolutionary.”
7. The Muddy Boot That Never Fully Dries
This boot smells like mildew, swamp secrets, and the ghost of a crawfish boil. It has been through things. It has trauma. It has character development.
Piper: “That boot would never gaslight me.”
8. The Sponge You Should Have Thrown Away in 2019
This sponge is a biohazard. It is a microbial theme park. It smells like a wet gremlin. And yet? It is more reliable than any press briefing.
Tinkerbell: “That sponge has more structural integrity.”
9. The Bag of Salad That Turned Into Swamp Water Overnight
You bought it with good intentions. You blinked. It liquefied. It smells like a bog witch’s armpit.
Coco: “That salad at least tried to do something productive.”
And so, after reviewing diapers with emotional baggage and a vendetta. Litter boxes in codependent chaos and in couples therapy. Onions with career goals. Haunted gym socks with PTSD. A liquefied bag of salad. And Tupperware that has achieved full spiritual ascension. One truth stands firm. We have toured the underworld of stink. The swamp of scents. The olfactory apocalypse itself. And the current administration? Give me the stink. Give me the chaos. Give me the onion with a five‑year plan. At least they don’t gaslight me.
There are many things in this world that stink. And after all that? I trust every single one of these foul, unholy, nose‑curling abominations more than I trust the current administration. Because at least the stink is honest.
At least the stink warns you before it ruins your day. At least the stink doesn’t pretend to be anything other than what it is. At least the stink owns its chaos instead of filing it under “pending review.” The administration? They’ll hand you a burning dumpster and call it “innovation.”
Piper is lighting sage like she’s trying to smoke out a demon. Tinkerbell is drafting a bill titled “The National Odor Accountability Act.” And Coco is in the corner filing a FOIA request with a clipboard whispering, “We need oversight. We need structure. We need a nose‑based justice system.” As for me? I’m opening a window and letting the truth air out. And my spirit guides begging me to stop reading the news before bed.
Let the record show itself carved into stone. Embroidered on a pillow. Tattooed on the lower back of democracy itself. I trust the stink. I believe the stink. I stand with the stink. And until the administration can match the moral clarity of a trash can in a heat wave? I’ll be over here with my cats, my sage, and my nose plugs. And I’ll be choosing the truth. Choosing the chaos. And choosing the funk. Thanks for reading! And watch this stinky administration cause chaos and ruin our democracy.
Affirmation: I release all illusions, delusions, and government issued nonsense.
“I didn’t wake up to choose violence. But my spirit, my schedule, and my digestive system clearly held a secret meeting without me.”
-This Puzzled Life
Light the charcoal. Sprinkle the sage. Today, I need spiritual reinforcement. I need divine intervention. I need the ancestors, the angels, and maybe even a hazmat team. Why? Because I have once again encountered the most baffling, lawless, civilization‑ending behavior known to humankind. And it’s the people who do not flush public toilets.
I’m not talking about toddlers. I’m not talking about someone in the middle of a plumbing emergency. I’m talking about full‑grown adults with jobs, vehicles, and voting rights walking away from a toilet like they’re leaving the scene of a crime. And I’m tired.
Clearly we need to cleanse this house, this neighborhood, and possibly the entire Deep South of the spiritual funk caused by grown adults who refuse to flush the commode. I’m not naming names. But if the shoe fits, it probably smells like the inside of a Dollar General bathroom after a power outage. The cats have convened an emergency meeting of the Feline Administration for Sanitation & Southern Decency. And let me tell you, they are fed up also.
Let me tell you something. Walking into a public bathroom in the South is like spinning a roulette wheel of trauma. You might get lucky and find a clean stall. Or you might open a door and see something that makes you reevaluate your entire relationship with humanity. I’ve walked into gas station bathrooms that smelled like someone tried to boil crawfish in holy water. I’ve walked into Walmart bathrooms where the lights flickered like the building was trying to warn me. I’ve walked into Dollar General bathrooms where the toilet seat was wet, and I didn’t ask a single question because I value my sanity. But the worst. The absolute worst is when someone leaves the toilet unflushed like it’s a public art installation titled “Chaos in Porcelain.”
I have questions. Deep, philosophical questions. Are people scared of the handle? Do they think the toilet is self‑cleaning? Are they performing a social experiment? Were they raised in a barn? Do they believe flushing is optional, like adding guac at Chipotle? I swear, some of these toilets look like someone tried to summon a demon and then got distracted.
Let me be clear. I have a list. A personal, emotional, spiritual list.
1. The gas‑station bathroom off Highway 49
The toilet was bubbling. I don’t know what was happening, but I left before it gained consciousness.
Piper’s Report: “I opened the door and immediately felt the presence of something unholy. The toilet was bubbling like it was trying to communicate. I will not be returning.” She has since saged her whiskers. The toilet made a noise that sounded like it was speaking in tongues.
2. The Walmart bathroom with the flickering lights
I opened the door and immediately felt like I was in a horror movie. I’m not auditioning to be the first one taken out. Absolutely not.
Tinkerbell’s Report: “I stepped inside and the lights flickered like a horror movie. I’m a cat, not a final girl. Absolutely not.” She then crossed herself even though she’s not religious.
Reason for Blacklisting: The stall door creaked open on its own. No one was inside. We left Immediately.
3. The Dollar General bathroom
If you know, you know. If you don’t know, keep it that way. Protect your peace.
Coco’s Report: “I don’t know what happened in there, but it smelled like someone tried to microwave a swamp. I’m not emotionally equipped for that.” She refused to make eye contact for the rest of the day.
Reason for Blacklisting: The toilet seat was wet. From what? We don’t ask questions in this house.
4. The Target bathroom with the graffiti warning
When a wall says, “Don’t look in the third stall,” that’s not a suggestion. That’s a prophecy. And I ignored it. And I regret it.
Tinkerbell’s Report: “The wall said, ‘Don’t look in the third stall.’ So naturally, I looked. I regret everything.” She has not spoken of what she saw.
Reason for Blacklisting: The third stall. That’s all we’re legally allowed to say.
5. The Buc‑ee’s bathroom that was suspiciously clean
Too clean. Uncomfortably clean. Like “someone is watching” clean.
Piper’s Report: “It was suspicious. No bathroom should sparkle like that. It felt like a trap.” She sniffed every corner like a bomb‑sniffing dog.
Reason for Blacklisting: Cleanliness so intense it felt like surveillance.
6. The Mall Bathroom With the Unflushed Situation
Coco’s Report: “I walked in, saw the unflushed disaster, and immediately filed a complaint with the universe. I’m still recovering.” She wrote his trauma memoir in crushed Goldfish cracker powder.
Reason for Blacklisting: The toilet bowl looked like a Jackson Pollock painting of regret.
7. The Park Bathroom With No Door
Tinkerbell’s Report: “I am a lady. I require privacy. I will not be conducting my business in an open‑air amphitheater.” She left with her dignity intact.
Reason for Blacklisting: No door. No lock. No hope.
I’m not asking for much. I’m not asking for aromatherapy diffusers or marble countertops or a choir of angels singing while I pee. I’m asking for one flush. One. Single. Flush. If you sprinkle, tinkle, plop, drop, splash, crash, or otherwise contribute anything to that toilet, flush it. It costs nothing. It takes one second. And it prevents trauma. May your public bathrooms be clean, your stalls be empty, and may you never again open a door and see something that requires therapy.
And so, as we gather our belongings, our dignity, and whatever spiritual protection we have left, let us remember this simple truth that Public bathrooms don’t have to be war zones. They don’t have to be escape rooms. They don’t have to be archaeological digs where you discover what the last person ate in 2007. All they require is for people to flush the commode like they were raised by humans and not released into the wild by accident.
Piper has spoken. Coco has unionized. Tinkerbell has filed a formal complaint with the ancestors. And together, they leave you with this final Southern blessing. “May your stalls be clean, your floors be dry, and may you never again encounter a toilet that looks like it needs a wellness check.” Amen, Ashe, and flush it.
If a bathroom requires courage, prayer, or a tetanus shot, the cats are out. If the toilet is unflushed, they’re out. If the air feels thick enough to chew, they’re out. And honestly? Same.
THE PUBLIC BATHROOM SURVIVAL GUIDE:
As mandated by the Feline Administration for Sanitation & Southern Decency
1. ENTER AT YOUR OWN RISK
Public bathrooms are not “restrooms.” They are escape rooms with plumbing. If you walk in and immediately smell something that makes your eyelashes curl backward, congratulations you’ve entered Level 1. Piper calls this “The Warm Welcome.” She says if the air feels chewy, turn around.
2. THE FLUSHING CRISIS: A NATIONAL EMERGENCY
Let’s address the porcelain elephant in the room. Why are people not flushing? Is it rebellion? Is it laziness? Is it generational trauma? Is it a cry for help? Tinkerbell says it’s a lack of home training. Coco says it’s a lack of supervision. Piper says it’s a lack of Jesus. I say it’s all three.
3. THE CATS’ OFFICIAL OBSERVATIONS
PIPER (Baby Chaos, Bathroom Anthropologist):
“Some of these toilets look like someone tried to summon a demon and then got scared halfway through. Flush it. I’m too young for this.” She now carries emotional support treats.
COCO (Snack Lobbyist & Public Restroom Union Rep):
“I’ve seen gas‑station toilets that looked like they needed a wellness check. If I can cover my business in a litter box and still be decent enough to bury it, humans can push a handle.” She then filed a petition written in crushed Goldfish cracker powder, because he believes in snack‑based activism.
TINKERBELL (Dignity Enforcement Officer):
“I walked into a Walmart bathroom and saw something that made me reconsider reincarnation. I will not be returning.” She has since created a personal Do‑Not‑Enter list that includes any bathroom with flickering lights, any bathroom with a wet floor for “mysterious reasons,” any bathroom where the toilet seat is up AND the stall door is unlocked, and any bathroom with graffiti that says, “Don’t look in the third stall.”
4. THE RULES OF SURVIVAL
Rule #1: If you make it, you flush it.
This is kindergarten-level stuff. If you can operate a smartphone, you can operate a toilet.
Rule #2: If the toilet looks like it’s fighting for its life, choose another stall.
Do not be a hero. This is not your battle.
Rule #3: If the floor is wet, assume the worst.
Do not investigate. Do not sniff. Do not ask questions. Just hover like your mama taught you.
Rule #4: Never trust a gas‑station bathroom after 10 p.m.
Coco calls this “The Witching Hour.”
Rule #5: If the hand dryer sounds like a jet engine, it’s lying.
It will not dry your hands. It will only blow your sins back at you.
Today we not only cleansed the house. We cleansed society. Specifically, the part of society that walks into a public bathroom, commits a biological felony, and then strolls out like they’re headed to a church potluck. I’m convinced some people think public toilets are interactive art installations. Or maybe they believe the commode is a museum exhibit titled “The Human Condition.”
So, let’s be honest. If you wouldn’t leave your own toilet looking like that, why are you doing it in public? This is not a scavenger hunt. This is not a science experiment. This is not a performance art piece titled “Chaos in Porcelain.” It’s a toilet. Flush it. We’ve cleansed the energy of every gas station, Walmart, Buc‑ee’s, and Dollar General bathroom from here to the Gulf Coast. The cats say it’s a public health crisis. I say it’s a moral failing. Together, we say, “FLUSH THE DAMN COMMODE!” Thanks for reading! And beware of unflushed toilets.
Affirmation: I honor my chaos, laugh at my disasters, and rise today knowing that even when life goes sideways, I still show up shining, hydrated, and unbothered.
“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.
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.”
“Some folks meditate. Some folks journal. I personally prefer a strain strong enough to make my trauma sit down and hush like it’s in church.”
-This Puzzled Life
Light the charcoal. Sprinkle the sage. Today we’re not just talking about PTSD. We’re talking about the botanical emotional support squad that keeps half this nation from screaming into a throw pillow at 3 AM. These are the 2026 strains for PTSD. Plus, the classic strains that have held us down since the Bush administration.
Let me tell you something. If PTSD awareness had a mascot. It wouldn’t be a bald eagle, a ribbon, or some inspirational mountain silhouette. It would be a raccoon in a bathrobe holding a half‑charged vape pen and whispering, “You good?”
And before anybody starts with the “PTSD is only for veterans” , it is equal‑opportunity chaos. It hits veterans, yes. But it also hits childhood survivors, domestic violence survivors, medical trauma survivors, and people who grew up in households where the family motto was basically “We don’t talk about that.” And anyone who has ever tried to call customer service during Mercury retrograde.
My PTSD didn’t come from a battlefield. It came from childhood trauma, adult trauma, and a lifetime of being handed emotional assignments I, absolutely, did not sign up for. And guess what? It’s still real. It’s still valid. And it still deserves treatment that doesn’t come with a 47‑page lawsuit attached to it.
Which brings me to medical cannabis. It’s the only medication I’ve ever taken that didn’t require a blood test, a warning label, and a prayer circle. Big Pharma stays in court like it’s a hobby. Cannabis? Cannabis just wants you hydrated, fed, and emotionally stable enough to fold laundry.
And with the way this country is going, the news, the politics, the economy, the general vibe, the rate of PTSD is about to skyrocket like it’s trying to win a prize. Let’s talk about the strains that are stepping up in 2026 to keep us from losing our entire minds.
2026 NEW STRAINS FOR PTSD
1. Moonwater Mercy (Hybrid)
(Blue Moonshine x Lavender Ghost x Watermelon Gelato)
This strain feels like someone put a weighted blanket on your soul. Expect calm, clarity, and the sudden ability to answer emails without crying. Perfect for: intrusive thoughts, doom spirals, and “Why did I walk into this room?”
2. Velvet Lantern (Indica‑leaning Hybrid)
(Purple Velvet × (Ghost OG × Honeydew Cream))
Soft. Warm. Comforting. Like being hugged by a grandmother who actually went to therapy. Great for nighttime PTSD symptoms and shutting down the brain’s late‑night conspiracy theories.
Bright, uplifting, and shockingly functional. This one gives you energy without anxiety — a miracle, truly. Ideal for daytime PTSD management and remembering you’re a whole adult with things to do.
4. Quiet Harbor (Indica)
(Northern Lights × (Harbor Mist × Blue Zkittlez))
This strain is basically emotional noise‑canceling headphones. Your nervous system goes from “car alarm” to “gentle tide sounds” in about ten minutes.
5. Blue Ember Renewal (Balanced Hybrid)
(Blueberry × (Ember Kush × Renewal Cake))
A perfect 50/50 that smooths out mood swings, reduces hypervigilance, and helps you stop side‑eyeing every noise in the house like you’re in a horror movie.
CLASSIC STRAINS FOR PTSD (The OG Emotional Support Crew)
1. Granddaddy Purple
(Purple Urkle × Big Bud)
The strain that tucked half of America into bed. Heavy relaxation, deep calm, and the ability to sleep like you’re being paid for it.
2. Blue Dream
(Blueberry × Haze)
The people’s champion. Creative, calm, and uplifting without making your heart beat like a hummingbird on espresso.
3. Girl Scout Cookies (GSC)
(Durban Poison × OG Kush)
Euphoric, grounding, and perfect for when your brain is doing too much. A classic for emotional regulation and mood stabilization
4. Do‑Si‑Dos
(Girl Scout Cookies (GSC) × Face Off OG)
Deep body calm, mental quiet, and the sudden ability to forgive people you don’t even like. A PTSD staple.
5. OG Kush
(Chemdawg × Lemon Thai × Hindu Kush)
The original “I need to chill before I throw this whole house away” strain. Relaxing, grounding, and reliable.
If you’ve made it this far, you’ve just survived a guided tour through the 2026 PTSD strain lineup. The classics that raised us. And the emotional circus that is living in this country right now. PTSD is real. PTSD is widespread. PTSD is not limited to veterans. And pretending otherwise only hurts the millions of us who survived battles nobody saw.
But here’s the good news. We’re healing. We’re laughing. We’re finding relief in plant medicine that doesn’t come with a lawsuit or a side effect list longer than a CVS receipt. And if the world keeps spiraling the way it’s spiraling, at least we’ll have strains strong enough to keep us grounded, sane, and spiritually moisturized. Trauma may have shaped you, but cannabis is helping you rewrite the ending. Sage still burning. We’re healing anyway. Thanks for reading! Keep blazin.’
Affirmation: I am healing, hydrated, and held together by equal parts resilience and premium-grade cannabis. My peace is non‑refundable. My boundaries are laminate. And my nervous system is finally minding its business.
“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 Southerners 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.
“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.
“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.