Piper’s Birthday: The Annual Celebration of Chaos, Glory, and Unsolicited Diva Behavior

“Piper didn’t just celebrate her birthday. She declared it a month‑long federal holiday. Which was complete with snacks and drama.”

-This Puzzled Life

Light the charcoal. Sprinkle the sage. Today we are not just clearing the energy. We are preparing the spiritual runway for Piper’s birthday. It’s a national holiday in this household. And a federally unrecognized emergency everywhere else. The ancestors leaned in. The walls vibrated. And even the dust bunnies paused mid-roll like, Oh Lord. She’s awake.”

Piper woke up at 4:12 a.m. she emerged from her blanket cocoon like a Southern debutante who’d overslept her own cotillion. She announced, loudly, that it was her birthday and therefore all rules, boundaries, and common sense were suspended until further notice. She strutted into the kitchen like Beyoncé entering Coachella, except with more fur and significantly less humility. And she sashayed like she was headlining the Met Gala, the BET Awards, and the Second Coming all at once. 

Tinkerbell blinked twice. And was calculating whether she had the emotional bandwidth for this level of drama before coffee. She had been asleep on top of the fridge like a gargoyle with opinions. She cracked one eye open and said, “You were born in a litter box, not a prophecy. Calm down.” Coco, already chewing on something she absolutely should not be chewing on. And was already halfway through stealing Piper’s birthday treats, added, “Yeah, happy birthday or whatever. Move so I can finish this bag,” with the enthusiasm of a DMV employee on their last nerve. 

Piper: “I expect reverence. I expect snacks. I expect apologies for every injustice I have endured since last year’s birthday.”

Me: “Piper, the last birthday was the day you were born.”

Piper: “And what a glorious day that was.”

Tinkerbell: “Girl, that’s a trilogy.” 

Coco: “I got snacks.” 

Piper strutted with the confidence of a cat who believes the entire month was created in her honor. You’d think Pride Month was just her personal 30‑day runway. Tinkerbell rolled her eyes so hard she saw her past nine lives. But even she had to admit Piper’s rainbow feather boa was giving “Southern queer icon.” Coco, meanwhile, was wearing a single rainbow sticker she found under the couch and declared herself “the bisexual representation.” The whole house felt like a Pride parade float sponsored by chaos and snacks.

And because the universe has a sense of humor, Piper’s birthday also falls right at the start of hurricane season. And that means the weather outside was giving “dramatic lesbian energy.” The wind was giving “unresolved trauma.” And the sky was giving “I might cry, I might not, stay tuned.” 

Piper insisted the storm clouds were simply “mood lighting” for her celebration. Tinkerbell started boarding up windows. Coco tried to eat the sandbags. And Piper sat in the middle of it all. Her birthday crown was crooked. Her Pride boa was shedding. The hurricane winds were ruffling her fur. And she declared, “This is my season.” It was a whole meteorological situation.

Piper gasped. The kind of gasp that suggested she had been personally betrayed by the entire state of Mississippi. 

Piper: “It’s my day. I want a party. I want a cake. I want a speech. And I want reparations for every time y’all have wronged me.”

Tinkerbell: “Girl, that’s a multi-volume series.” 

And with that, the celebration began.

Tinkerbell took charge because she’s the only one with project management skills. She drafted a schedule. Color-coded it. And taped it to the wall.

Coco immediately ate the tape.

Piper: “The theme has got to be, Glamour, Mystery, and the Suffering I Endure Daily.”

TinkerbellWe’re doing the best we can with what we’ve got.”

Coco: “Snacks.”

Ultimately, they compromised on, Piper’s Birthday Bash: A Celebration of Drama, Snacks, and Questionable Decisions. The decorations were a mix of Tinkerbell’s carefully arranged aesthetic choices. Coco’s teeth marks. And Piper’s face printed on eight sheets of paper because she demanded “visual representation.” The cake was a tuna tower that leaned like it had secrets.

Piper sat on her birthday throne (a laundry basket with a blanket she stole from everyone else) and demanded the gift-giving begin.

Tinkerbell’s gift was a handmade card that read, To the cat who cries wolf the most. May your drama be ever entertaining.” 

Piper pretended to be offended but kept the card under her paw like it was a love letter.

Coco’s gift was a half-eaten treat she found under the couch which she claimed was vintage.

Piper accepted it like it was a diamond.

The household’s gift was a new toy mouse. And Piper immediately accused it of “looking at her wrong.” Then came the speeches. Tinkerbell delivered a heartfelt, dignified tribute. 

Coco: “Happy birthday, now move, you’re blocking the sunbeam.”

Piper gave a 12-minute monologue about her resilience, her beauty, and the trials she has survived (most of which were naps she didn’t finish).

Piper blew out her candle with the force of a woman making a wish and a threat at the same time. Tinkerbell rolled her eyes so hard she saw her past lives. And Coco stole the icing. And then Piper, our dramatic, overcaffeinated, emotionally fragile queen, declared it the best birthday ever. By the end of the day, Piper was sprawled across the couch like a Victorian widow recovering from “the vapors.” Tinkerbell was reorganizing the pantry in silent judgment. And Coco was asleep in the treat bag.

By the time the cake was eaten, the sage had burned down to a nub. And the wind had stopped threatening to snatch the roof off. Piper stood tall. Flicked her tail. And delivered her final proclamation, “Birthday celebrated. Pride honored. Hurricane survived. Y’all may now resume your regular programming.” And with that, she dropped the mic. Knocked it off the table. And walked away like the diva she was born to be. Because nothing says celebration like three Southern cats turning a simple birthday into a full-blown mythological event. Thanks for reading! And Happy Birthday, my sweet Piper.

Affirmation: I move through this world like a well‑fed storm. I’m loud when I need to be. Soft when I choose to be. And absolutely unbothered by anyone who forgets I was born to take up glorious, unapologetic space.

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

#ThisPuzzledLife

Hurricane Season: The Cats Declare a State of Emergency

“Down South, the storms are loud. But my cats are louder.”

-This Puzzled Life

Light the charcoal. Sprinkle the sage. If we’re going to talk about my cats and hurricane season, we might as well start this story the same way every Southern family meeting starts. With smoke in the air. Humidity thick enough to baptize you against your will. And at least one animal acting like the world is ending before the meteorologists even finish their sentence. And when I light the charcoal, my cats assume I’m performing some ancient Gulf Coast ritual to summon the first named storm of the season. Piper squints at the sky like she’s reading the Book of Revelations. Coco starts reorganizing the pantry like she’s prepping for a Category 12. And Tinkerbell? She faints dramatically onto the welcome mat like a Victorian widow who just heard the barometric pressure drop. Meanwhile, I’m just trying to grill a chicken thigh without being accused of weather witchcraft.

Hurricane season has begun and the cats must now enter their annual state of dramatic overreaction. Down here in Mississippi, we don’t wait for Jim Cantore to show up on the Weather Channel. We wait for Coco to start pacing like she’s the head of FEMA. Piper to start judging the barometric pressure. And Tinkerbell to start packing her emotional support toys like she’s evacuating to Baton Rouge.

Piper acts like she’s the only one in the house with a working weather app. The moment the first tropical depression forms off the coast of Africa, she sits in the window like she’s tracking it with Doppler radar. Tail twitching. Eyes narrowed. Judging the humidity like it personally offended her. If the National Hurricane Center ever needs a sassy, biscuit-making forecaster who communicates exclusively through side-eye, she’s available.

Coco takes hurricane season seriously. She starts reorganizing the pantry like she’s preparing for the apocalypse. She drags bags of treats under the bed “just in case,” and I swear she tried to ration the Temptations last week. She even inspected the generator by sitting on it and refusing to move. She also insists on doing “storm drills,” which is just her sprinting through the house at 3 a.m. like a Category 5 with fur.

Tinkerbell is not built for weather related stress. She is built for naps, snacks, and being carried like a Victorian child with delicate lungs. The moment thunder rolls, she becomes a 6-pound Southern damsel in distress, flopping dramatically across the floor like, “Oh lawd, take me now.” She packs her favorite mouse toy, her blanket, and her attitude, then sits by the door like she’s waiting for the evacuation bus.

Household Preparations (According to the Cats)

  • Secure loose items outside-Piper knocks over every plant on the porch to “test wind resistance.”
  • Check flashlights-Tinkerbell bites them to ensure “structural integrity.”
  • Stock up on essentials-Coco sits in the middle of the grocery bags like she’s guarding the nation’s last supply of Fancy Feast.
  • Review evacuation routes-All three cats run under the bed and refuse to come out, which is exactly where they’ll be if we ever actually need to leave.

When the first tropical storm finally forms, the cats gather like a furry emergency council.

Piper: “This humidity is unacceptable.” 

Coco: “We need to shelter in place. Preferably near the treats.” 

Tinkerbell: “I have fainted. Someone fetch my smelling salts.”

Meanwhile, I’m just trying to close the shutters while yelling, “Y’all, it’s just rain! We live in the Gulf South! This is our personality trait!” But no. According to them, this is a full-scale natural disaster requiring snacks, naps, and dramatic monologues.

 Hurricane season in a Southern household with cats is less about preparedness and more about managing feline theatrics. The storms may come and go. But the cats’ commitment to chaos is year-round. And honestly? I wouldn’t have it any other way.

As hurricane season rolls in loud, humid, and disrespectful, my cats continue their annual tradition of acting like they’re the only ones holding this household together. And as the first storm bands roll in with wind howling. Trees bending. And humidity thick enough to butter toast. The cats will continue their sacred seasonal rituals. Piper will keep forecasting doom. Coco will keep hoarding snacks like she’s preparing for the Great Depression Part II: Gulf Coast Edition. And Tinkerbell will keep collapsing like she’s auditioning for a Southern Gothic opera. And whispering with her eyes, “Tell my story.”

And me? I’ll be right here. Lighting the charcoal. Praying for a breeze. And accepting that no matter what the National Hurricane Center says, the real storm is living with three dramatic Southern cats who believe they are the main characters of the Gulf Coast. And I’ll be standing in the doorway. Hair frizzed into a shape not recognized by science yelling, “IT’S JUST RAIN, Y’ALL!” While three furry Southerners behave like they’re starring in Gone With the Wind: The Meteorological Cut.

The truth is that hurricanes come and go. But the cats’ commitment to unnecessary theatrics is a year-round, Category 5 situation. And honestly? That’s the real emergency alert system in this house. So go on, Mother Nature. Spin your little storms. My cats have already declared a state of emergency. Eaten the rations. And blamed me for the humidity. Storm dismissed. The cats remain undefeated. Thanks for reading! And make sure you’re prepared.

Affirmation: I stay calm, even when the cats act like the Weather Channel is personally attacking them.

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

#ThisPuzzledLife

Glitter, Grace, Gay Rage, and the Feelings Police

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

-Unknown

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

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

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

Tinkerbell: “That sound is freedom, Brenda.”

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

#ThisPuzzledLife

The Bitchuation Room: When Flip‑Flops Reveal Feet That Should’ve Stayed a Secret

“If your heels are flaking like pastry. And your toenails look like they’re filing for emancipation. That’s not a flip‑flop problem. That’s a closed‑toe season.” 

-Mavis “Two-Puffs” Delacroix, Patron Saint of Lotion and Public Decency

Light the citronella candle and prepare your spirit. Welcome back to The Bitchuation Room, where we gather in community to discuss the things that keep us humble. Keep us laughing. And keep us from catching charges at Target. Today’s topic? A summertime menace so bold. So brazen. And so visually disrespectful. That it deserves its own chapter in the Book of Southern Offenses. Feet. Not just any feet. The renegade. Unlicensed. Unregulated feet that pop out in flip‑flops every summer like cicadas with no shame and no lotion. If you’ve ever been personally victimized by a pair of toes that looked like they were trying to file for emancipation, pull up a chair. We’re going in.

Let me paint you a picture. It’s a beautiful Mississippi day. The humidity is sitting on your chest like a judgmental auntie. You’re minding your business. Trying to get groceries, iced coffee, or emotional stability whichever comes first. And then you see it.

A pair of flip-flops attached to feet that have seen things. Feet that have survived wars no one told us about. Feet that look like they’ve been kicking cinder blocks for sport. Feet that whisper, “I gave up, and so should you.”

Flip-flops are already the most unserious shoe ever invented. They’re basically two rubber pancakes held together by a wish. They are not built for trauma. They are not built for stress. They are not built for toes that look like they’re trying to escape the family. And yet, people will slide their entire situation into a flip-flop like it’s a safe space.

Meanwhile the flip-flop is screaming, “Please! I was not designed for this. I am a casual shoe. I am a vacation shoe. I am a ‘run to the mailbox’ shoe. I am not a frontline worker.” Because some of these feet? They are not just outside. They are outside, outside feet.

Because listen. We cannot, in good conscience, talk about flip‑flops and skip over the toenail situation happening out here in these Mississippi streets. Some of y’all are walking around with toenails that look like they’ve been through three divorces, a custody battle, and a tornado. Toenails so long they’re clicking against the flip‑flop like they’re sending Morse code. Toenails so yellow they look like they’ve been marinating in sweet tea. Toenails so jagged they could open Amazon packages. And the confidence? Unfazed. Unapologetic. Unclipped.

Then we get to the heels. Dear Lord, the heels. Some of these heels are so flaky they should come with a “May Contain Gluten” warning. Heels so dry they could strike fire if you walk too fast. Heels that look like they’ve been exfoliating the concrete since Mardi Gras 2004. Heels that shed like a lizard in spiritual transition. And the worst part? The flip‑flop is just sitting there. Holding on for dear life. And collecting heel dust like it’s a Swiffer pad. Do you ever see someone shuffle by, and a little cloud of heel flakes rises up like pollen? That’s not summer. That’s not humidity. That’s foot dandruff.

At that point, it’s not even petty to stare. It’s self‑defense. My ancestors didn’t survive Reconstruction for me to get hit in the eye with somebody’s heel shrapnel at Dollar General. 

We’re talking about toenails that resemble lethal weapons doing interpretive dance. Ashiness so profound it qualifies as a weather pattern. Heels that could strike sparks. Toes gripping the edge of the flip-flop like they’re hanging off a cliff in an action movie. And a pinky toe that has never once in its life minded its business. And the confidence? Unmatched. Unbothered. Unmoisturized.

It’s not the feet alone. It’s the freedom with which they are displayed. These are not shy feet. These are not “let me tuck myself behind a sandal strap” feet. These are “I paid for these flip-flops. And I WILL get my $4.99 worth” feet. Feet out here raw dogging the air. Feet out here exfoliating the sidewalk. Feet out here threatening public safety.

Do you ever hear someone walking behind you and the flip-flops are just schlup, schlup, schlup. Like the sound of a wet sponge giving up? You turn around expecting a tired toddler. Nope. It’s a grown adult with flip-flops and feet that look like they’ve been through the Great Depression.

I am not judging feet. Feet work hard. Feet carry us through life. Feet deserve love. But if your feet look like they’ve been kicking sugarcane fields barefoot since 1892. Maybe today is not a flip-flop day. Moisturize. File. Buff. Or simply choose a closed-toe shoe and let the Lord work on you privately.

And that concludes today’s ministry. May your heels be smooth. Your toes be aligned. And your flip‑flops never have to carry more trauma than they were built for. If you insist on stepping out with feet that look like they’ve been kicking bricks since Reconstruction, just know that The Bitchuation Room sees all. Records all. And will absolutely report live from the scene. Amen, Ashe, and moisturize accordingly.

Affirmation: I honor my feet with moisture, maintenance, and mercy. I refuse to let my heels shed like a biblical plague or my toenails audition for a horror film. I step into the world smooth, aligned, and unproblematic. Because my flip‑flops deserve better, and so does the public.

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

#ThisPuzzledLife

Even My Cats Know You Can’t Heal in the Same Environment That Hurt You.

“You can’t heal in the same environment that taught you to hide your wounds. Sometimes the bravest thing you’ll ever do iswalk away from the place that expected you to stay broken.”

-This Puzzled Life

Light the charcoal. Sprinkle the sage. Apparently, healing requires both barbecue energy and spiritual pest control. Welcome back to my household. Where the cats run the HOA. The ancestors run the commentary. And I’m just trying to unlearn 30 years of “bless your heart and keep suffering quietly.” Today’s sermon is titled, “You Cannot Heal in the Same Environment That Hurt You.” And yes, the cats have notes.

You ever try to heal in the same place that taught you to pretend everything was fine? It’s like trying to detox from sugar while sitting inside a Krispy Kreme with the “Hot Now” sign glowing like the gates of temptation. Meanwhile, my Southern upbringing is in the corner whispering, “Well now, you can leave, but don’t you dare make a scene. And take this casserole so folks don’t think you’re ungrateful.”

Healing in the same environment that hurt you is basically a full‑contact sport. You’re dodging old triggers. Outdated expectations. And that one relative who still thinks therapy is “for people who don’t pray hard enough. And still thinks Obama personally raised your rent.” Nothing says emotional clarity like feline commentary.m

Coco (the judgmental one): “Girl, you keep trying to heal in the same room where your trauma sleeps. Move the furniture or move yourself.”

Piper (the chaotic one): “I say we knock everything off the shelves and start fresh. Healing begins with destruction.”

Tinkerbell (the Southern belle of the group): “Bless your heart. Even Jesus left Nazareth.”

And honestly, they’re right. Cats don’t stay in places that stress them out. They relocate with the confidence of a woman who knows she’s too good for this nonsense.

Southern Conservative Truth #1

“If it ain’t working, you don’t fix it. You replace it.” This applies to lawn chairs, husbands, and emotional environments.

Southern Conservative Truth #2

“You can’t grow tomatoes in poisoned soil.” But you can grow generational trauma if you keep watering it.

Southern Conservative Truth #3

“If the dog keeps biting you, stop blaming the dog and fix the fence.” Stop expecting people who hurt you to suddenly develop character.

Southern Conservative Truth #4

“You can’t sit on a broken chair and then get mad when you hit the floor.” If the environment is unstable, your healing will be too.

Southern Conservative Truth #5

“If the chicken’s burnt, the oven ain’t gonna apologize.” Some folks will never take accountability. Move on.

Southern Conservative Truth #6

“You can’t plant hope in a field full of denial and expect a harvest.” Healing requires fertile ground. Not family members who think boundaries are disrespectful.

Southern Conservative Truth #7

“If the swamp keeps producing gators, stop acting surprised when you get bit.” Patterns are patterns, not mysteries.

And of course, the cats had to weigh in again.

Coco: “Humans love staying in toxic places because they’re sentimental. Cats leave because we’re smart.” 

Piper: “If the vibes are off, I’m gone. No explanation. No forwarding address.” 

Tinkerbell: “A lady does not heal where she was harmed. She relocates with grace and a fresh can of Fancy Feast.”

Here’s the truth they don’t stitch on pillows. You cannot heal in the same environment that taught you to shrink, hush, or swallow your own voice like it was impolite to exist. You cannot bloom in soil that resents your roots. You cannot rise in a room built to keep you small. And you sure as hell cannot become your highest self in a place that only wanted the quiet, obedient version of you.

Healing requires space. Not the kind of space where you shove your feelings into a Tupperware container and label it “Later.” I mean real space. The kind where you can breathe without hearing echoes of who you used to be. Healing requires distance. Healing requires disruption. Healing requires the courage to walk away from the familiar and toward the version of you that refuses to die in the same cage she was born in.

Sometimes that means leaving the room. Sometimes that means leaving the house. Sometimes that means leaving the whole dang ZIP code. And sometimes it means telling your inner Southern critic, “No ma’am, we are not staying here out of politeness.” Healing requires new air, new light, new boundaries, and sometimes, a new porch to sit on while you process your life choices.

Leaving the environment that hurt you isn’t betrayal. It’s survival. It’s reclamation. It’s the moment you decide your healing deserves better than the bare minimum. And if anyone has a problem with it. Just tell them the cats said you’re unavailable for nonsense until further notice. And that’s on healing. Now excuse me while I sage the house like I’m trying to smoke out a demon.

So let them talk. Let them misunderstand you. Let them clutch their church bulletin and call it rebellion. Let them say you’ve changed. Because God knows you have. And thank goodness for that. You are not obligated to stay where your spirit was suffocated. You are not required to keep shrinking to fit the room. You are allowed to outgrow the places that could not love you whole.

And if anyone has a problem with your healing journey, tell them, “I didn’t leave because I was angry. I left because I was finally ready to breathe. And once you taste oxygen, you don’t go back to drowning.” Thanks for reading! And stop shrinking for their comfort.

Affirmation: I honor my healing by choosing spaces that honor me. I release the rooms that dimmed my light. And I rise in environments that celebrate my growth, my boundaries, and my becoming.

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

#ThisPuzzledLife

https://suno.com/s/yUMvAAJCwb7DpPK4

Being an Empath: A Blessing, a Curse, and Occasionally a Loud Situation

“Being an empath means I can feel your energy shift before you even decide to shift it. Don’t act surprised when I respond like I already read the whole plot twist.”

-This Puzzled Life

 Light the charcoal. Sprinkle the sage. It’s my way of announcing to the universe, and anybody else listening, that the energy is about to be corrected. Redirected. Or escorted out. It’s not decoration. It’s a declaration. The vibes will behave. Or they will be removed.

Let me go on and say this before somebody gets the wrong idea and starts assigning me spiritual homework that I did not sign up for. Being an empath does not mean I’m a soft‑spoken emotional Roomba gliding around the house sucking up everybody’s mess in silence. No ma’am. No sir. No spirit.

I am an empath with range. I can read your tone, micro‑tone, micro‑aggression, and the ghost of the tone you almost used. And if my intuition taps me on the shoulder and whispers, “They tried you,” I will absolutely raise my voice like a Southern Baptist who just found out somebody parked in her spot at church.

Empath does not mean quiet. Empath means I know exactly why I’m yelling. People love to romanticize empaths like we’re walking mood rings with good credit. But the truth is more complicated. Being an empath is a blessing because you can walk into a room and instantly know who’s lying. Who’s tired. Who’s two seconds from crying. Who’s pretending to be fine. Who’s about to start some mess. Who needs a hug. Who needs a boundary. And who needs to be escorted out by security.

But it’s also a curse. You can’t turn it off. You can’t unfeel what you felt. You can’t unsee the emotional weather patterns swirling around people like spiritual Doppler radar. And sometimes you’re sitting there thinking, “Lord, why did you give me this gift without a mute button?”

Let’s tell the truth that makes people uncomfortable. Some empaths aren’t born. They’re forged. Some of us learned to read a room because we had to. Because survival depended on knowing when the energy shifted.

When someone’s mood changed. When danger was coming. When silence meant safety. And when footsteps meant run. That kind of childhood intuition doesn’t disappear. It grows up with you. It becomes a skill, a shield, a superpower and sometimes a burden you didn’t ask for.

So yes, some empaths are spiritually gifted. And some of us are trauma‑trained emotional detectives with a sixth sense and a therapist on speed dial. Being an empath means you don’t just enter a room. You scan it. You feel the tension in the air before anyone speaks. You clock the fake smile from across the room. You sense the passive‑aggressive energy floating near the snack table. You know who’s genuinely happy to see you. And who’s performing hospitality like it’s community theater. It’s not paranoia. It’s pattern recognition.

And while everyone else is like, “Oh, the vibe seems fine.” You’re standing there like, “No it doesn’t. Somebody in here is lying. And somebody else is about to cry.” Boundaries aren’t optional for empaths. They are survival gear. Without boundaries, an empath will drown in other people’s emotions like they’re swimming in a pool they didn’t even want to get in.

Boundaries are how we protect our peace, our energy, our intuition, our sanity, our inner child, our outer adult, and the version of us that still wants to believe people mean well. People who don’t understand boundaries think they’re rude. People who need your boundaries think they’re personal attacks. But people who love you will understand that boundaries are how you stay alive, present, and emotionally available without burning yourself to ash.

Let me be extremely clear in a way that even the spiritually hard‑of‑hearing can understand. When an empath sets a boundary, it is not a suggestion, a preference, or a cute little decorative fence. It is survival architecture.

Empaths don’t set boundaries casually. We set boundaries because we’ve already scanned the emotional terrain. We’ve already clocked the patterns. We’ve already felt the shift in your tone. And we’ve already sensed the storm clouds gathering behind your smile.

When someone violates a boundary we clearly communicated, it doesn’t feel like a misunderstanding. It feels like a threat. It feels like disrespect. It feels like someone walked into our house. Ignored the “Please remove your shoes” sign. And tracked mud across the ancestral rug. And because empaths are wired to detect danger that is emotional, spiritual, and energetic, boundary violations hit us like alarms going off in a building we didn’t even want to be in.

This is why people get confused when an empath goes from calm to “Oh absolutely not” in 0.3 seconds. They think we’re overreacting. But what they don’t understand is we saw the intention. We felt the entitlement. We recognized the pattern. And we sensed the disrespect before it fully formed.

By the time we raise our voice, the situation has already been analyzed. Processed. And spiritually notarized. Empaths don’t explode out of nowhere. We respond to the data. Violating a boundary is the emotional equivalent of someone looking us dead in the eye and saying, “I don’t respect your peace, your intuition, or your humanity.” At that point, the empath is not being dramatic. The empath is being accurate.

When I say I’m an empath, people assume I’m out here collecting gold stars from the universe. And waiting for someone to pat me on the head and say, “Good job for feeling things deeply. Absolutely not. I don’t need outside validation because I validate myself loudly, confidently, and with the full support of my intuition, my ancestors, and my own emotional PhD.

I spent too many years being trained to read every room, every tone, every shift in energy just to survive. So, trust me when I say, I know what I feel. I know why I feel it. And I don’t need a committee meeting to confirm it. My inner knowing is the authority. My boundaries are the policy. And my self‑validation is the final stamp of approval. Anyone else’s opinion is optional, decorative, and often late to the truth I already knew.

The next time somebody hears “empath” and assumes I’m a gentle emotional cloud floating through life, let me correct the record. I’m not floating. I’m detecting. I’m reading the room, the subtext, the spiritual Wi‑Fi, and the emotional weather report. And if the forecast says, “disrespect with a 70% chance of foolishness,” trust and believe I will bring the thunder. Empathy doesn’t make me silent. And sometimes accuracy requires volume. Thanks for reading! And go with your gut. Because it’s the most accurate feeling that you can feel.

Affirmation: I honor my intuition. Protect my peace. And raise my voice only when spiritually necessary. Which, unfortunately for some folks, is more often than they’d prefer.

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

#ThisPuzzledLife

Memorial Day Mourning: When Patriotism Meets Disrespect

“A nation that forgets its fallen has already surrendered its soul.”

-This Puzzled Life

Light the charcoal. Today, ancestors, I need you close. I need every grandmother who prayed over folded flags. Every great‑uncle who never made it home. Every lineage‑bearer who stood against tyranny with nothing but grit, fear, and a trembling hope that their sacrifice would mean something. I need them all gathered around this fire with me. Because my heart is breaking in a way I can feel in my teeth.

Memorial Day is supposed to be sacred. A day of reverence. A day where the air itself feels heavy with memory. A day where we whisper “thank you” to the ones who went in our place. I don’t care how they voted. What bumper sticker they had. Or what political arguments they hollered at the TV. They went. They stood in the line of fire so I didn’t have to. They carried the weight of a nation on their backs. And some never came home to tell the story.

And now. We are living in an era where their sacrifices are being mocked. Minimized. And twisted into political theater. Where illegal war chew up American lives for reasons that don’t hold water. Where the Commander‑in‑Chief has openly called fallen soldiers “losers” and “suckers,” according to multiple reports from former officials. And I swear, ancestors, I can feel you shifting in your graves like, “We did NOT fight fascism for this.”

Let me be clear. This isn’t about politics. This is about decency, honor, and basic human respect. And they are the qualities that should never be partisan. And yet here we are. Watching behavior that would’ve gotten any of our mamas slapped with a sandal for raising someone so disrespectful. Here are examples that are widely reported. Documented. And discussed. They are of how Donald Trump has disrespected veterans and fallen soldiers.

  • Calling fallen soldiers “losers” and “suckers”– reported by multiple sources which including former senior officials. My ancestors just collectively rolled their eyes so hard the earth tilted.
  • Skipping a WWI cemetery visit in France because “it was raining.” Sir, they fought in trenches full of mud, blood, and rats the size of emotional support animals. You can handle a drizzle.
  • Attacking Gold Star families-families who lost loved ones in service. The audacity. The disrespect. The spiritual malpractice.
  • Mocking Senator John McCain’s capture-“I like people who weren’t captured.” My ancestors are now pacing the room with hands on hips.
  • Using the military as political props-something every veteran I know despises. Because service is not a campaign backdrop.
  • Delaying military aid for political leverage-which put actual soldiers at risk. The ancestors have now lit their own charcoal.

And the emotional stability? Lord. It’s giving “someone sprinting down the interstate with their bra and underwear on the outside of their clothes.” It’s giving me chaos. It’s giving “not a single ancestor signed off on this behavior.” And the compassion? About as present as a cactus at a cuddle party.

This is not how you honor the fallen. This is not how you respect the living. This is not how you lead a nation that has buried far too many of its children. My ancestors fought authoritarianism with their bare hands. Their last breaths. Their prayers whispered into the dirt. And now authoritarianism is parading through our streets wearing a red hat and a tantrum. While insisting it’s the second coming of patriotism. It’s not patriotism. It’s performance. And it’s breaking my heart.

And so, on this Memorial Day. I stand here with the charcoal lit. And the ancestors gathered like a celestial neighborhood watch, I have to say it plainly. America cannot honor its fallen while allowing a man who dodged the draft five times to strut around pretending to be the patron saint of patriotism. America cannot claim to respect sacrifice while elevating someone who avoided service with the infamous “bone spurs” excuse. A condition that miraculously healed the moment the danger passed and the privilege resumed. America cannot pretend to value courage while applauding someone whose greatest battle was apparently against accountability.

Because let’s be honest. The disrespect being hurled at our veterans and fallen soldiers isn’t coming from a place of strength. It’s coming from a place of entitlement so bloated it could have its own gravitational pull. It’s coming from a man who has never had to work for anything. Who has never known the terror of a battlefield. Who has never stood in the boots of the people he mocks.

And the behavior? Hold my sweet tea. We are watching a grown man. A man who holds the highest office in the land. Who is behaving with the emotional steadiness of someone who discovered social media for the first time and decided to treat it like a 3 a.m. confessional booth. Extended blinking sessions like he’s buffering. Late‑night ranting on whatever platform will still have him like Temu Twitter. And typing like a raccoon who found a phone in a staff member’s purse at a memory care facility. And is now live‑blogging its escape attempt.

And the consistency? The only thing consistent is the stench both literal and the metaphorical odor of disrespect, chaos, and ego that follows him like a cloud of Axe body spray applied by a teenager who doesn’t understand dosage.

Meanwhile, our fallen soldiers. The ones who actually knew sacrifice. Who actually faced danger. Who actually gave everything. Are being used as props in a performance that dishonors everything they stood for. My ancestors fought tyrants who believed they were above the people. Above the truth. And now, authoritarianism is parading through our streets loud. Petty. Self‑obsessed. And wrapped in a flag it does not deserve to touch.

So, hear me clearly. I honor our fallen. I honor our veterans. I honor every soul who went in my place so I could live free. But I will not and cannot stay silent while their memory is dragged through the mud by someone who never carried anything heavier than his own ego. This Memorial Day, I stand with the ancestors, the fallen, and the truth. And to the one disrespecting them? Your performance is over. Your act is tired. And the nation you claim to love deserves better. Thanks for reading! God bless those who lost their lives and took a stand against fascism and tyranny. What are your thoughts?

Affirmation: I honor the brave. I speak the truth. And I stand with the ancestors who fought for freedom before me.

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

#ThisPuzzledLife

Boundaries: When “No” Stops Being a Suggestion

“My boundaries are so tight now that if you overstep, my spirit will escort you back to your lane before I even open my mouth free of charge.”

-This Puzzled Life

Light the charcoal. Sprinkle the sage. The ancestors have gathered on my porch like it’s a family reunion, and they are whispering, “We did NOT endure Jim Crow, bad perms, and church fans with funeral ads on the back for you to let people treat your peace like a community potluck.”

Meanwhile, my cats have formed a boundary tribunal on the kitchen counter. Tails flicking. Eyes narrowed. And judging me with the same intensity they use when I buy the wrong flavor of treats.

One cat is channeling Harriet Tubman energy. Another is giving “your great‑granddaddy who didn’t play about his land.” The third is licking her paw like, “Let’s see if she finally learned how to say no without a 12‑slide PowerPoint.”

So welcome to Boundary School. Where the ancestors are the professors. The cats are the teaching assistants. And I am the student who keeps asking, “Is this going to be on the test?” People know the word boundaries the way they know the word ‘fiber.’  They’ve heard it’s important. But they have no earthly idea how to actually use it.”

People think boundaries are a vibe, a mood, a Pinterest board, or a cute quote on Instagram with a beige background. Boundaries are actually a set of rules that protect your time, energy, and sanity. A spiritual fence. A divine “Do Not Disturb” sign blessed by your ancestors. Boundaries are not rude. They are not mean. They are not optional. They are emotional sunscreen. And some of y’all are out here raw‑dogging the sun.

People misinterpret boundaries the way they misinterpret IKEA instructions. They think they understand. But the final product is wobbling. Missing screws. And leaning against the wall for emotional support. And people will swear you need their approval like it’s oxygen. When really it’s more like glitter which is unnecessary. Messy. And half the time it ends up places it shouldn’t.

Here’s the thing. You don’t need outside validation to live your life. Make your choices. Or protect your peace. You’re not a coupon that needs to be scanned. You’re not a parking ticket waiting for someone to stamp “approved.” You’re a whole human being with ancestors behind you. And a spirit that knows exactly what it’s doing.

People will misinterpret your confidence as arrogance. Because they’re used to you shrinking. They’ll say things like “You sure about that?” “I mean if that’s what you want to do.” Or “you’re making a mistake. But suit yourself.” When the only mistake would be letting people who can’t manage their own lives narrate yours.

My cats don’t seek validation. They don’t ask, “Was that a good jump?” They don’t wonder, “Do you like my vibe today?” They simply exist confidently, unapologetically, and occasionally on top of the fridge for no reason. Meanwhile, humans out here waiting for applause before they take a step.

Here’s the truth the ancestors keep whispering. “If you need permission, you’ll always be waiting. If you trust yourself, you’ll always be moving.” Your worth is not up for a vote. Your decisions are not a group project. Your life is not a suggestion box. You don’t need validation. You need alignment. And those are two very distinctly different things.

Some folks hear the word “boundaries” and immediately translate it into, “You’re being mean.” “You’re shutting me out.” “You think you’re better than me.” “You must be going through something.” Or my favorite “You’ve changed.” No, sweetheart. I’m not being mean. I’m being clear. And clarity feels like cruelty to people who benefited from your confusion.

Boundaries are not punishment. They are not revenge. They are not emotional eviction notices. But people will swear up and down that your boundary is a personal attack. Even though all you said was, “I’m not available for that.” Suddenly you’re the villain in their story. the antagonist in their memoir, the reason their tomato plants won’t grow this year.

Meanwhile, my cats set boundaries all day long and nobody questions it. A cat can walk away mid‑petting session, and everyone says, “Aww, look at her being independent.” But let a human say, “I need some space,” and suddenly it’s a federal investigation. Boundaries get misinterpreted because people confuse access with entitlement. They think your time is their time. Your energy is their energy. Your peace is their playground. And when you finally say, “Actually, no,” they act like you’ve personally unplugged their life support.

But here’s the truth and the ancestors are nodding in agreement. A boundary is not a wall. It’s a door with a lock. And you get to decide who has the key. Boundaries fall into categories and knowing them helps you enforce them without guilt.

1. Physical Boundaries

Your body, your space, your bubble. If someone stands too close, you have the right to step back like a cat avoiding a toddler.

2. Emotional Boundaries

You are not a sponge. You are not a therapist. You are not a free emotional storage unit.

3. Time Boundaries

Your time is not a community resource. You are not FEMA.

4. Material Boundaries

Your car, your money, your Tupperware. Especially the Tupperware. The ancestors get real loud about that one.

5. Conversational Boundaries

You don’t have to discuss things that drain you. You can simply say, “I’m not available for that topic,” and walk away like a cat who heard the treat bag but decided you weren’t worthy.

WHY HUMANS STRUGGLE (AND CATS DO NOT)

Humans: “I don’t want to hurt anyone’s feelings.”

Cats: “I will leave this room mid‑sentence and feel nothing.”

Humans: “I don’t want them to think I’m mean.”

Cats: “I will slap your hand away and then take a nap.”

Humans: “I don’t want to disappoint people.”

Cats: “I disappoint people recreationally.”

Cats are boundary prodigies. Humans are boundary interns.

The ancestors want you to know that “No” is a complete sentence. “I’m not available” is a spiritual practice. “That doesn’t work for me” is a generational blessing. “I’m leaving now” is self‑care. “I don’t receive that” is emotional pest control. They also want you to stop explaining yourself like you’re applying for a loan.

And as we close this ceremony of wisdom, comedy, and feline judgment, let us honor the truth. The ancestors did not survive oppression, heartbreak, and church potlucks with questionable potato salad for you to let someone’s grown child drain your spirit like a cracked Yeti cup. Your boundaries are sacred. Your peace is ancestral property. Your “no” is a generational blessing.

May your boundaries be as firm as a cat who has decided your pillow is now their homeland. May your spirit be as unbothered as a cat ignoring its name. May your peace be as protected as the good Tupperware. And may your boundaries rise up like your ancestors intended.

My boundaries are set. My peace is protected. And my spirit is no longer accepting walk‑ins. If you can’t handle that, take it up with the ancestors. They’re the ones who told me to stop letting folks treat my life like an open‑bar wedding. And with that, I’m stepping back into my joy, my clarity, and my God‑given right to say “no” without a dissertation. Thanks for reading! And protect your peace.

Affirmation: “I honor my peace like it’s heirloom china. I say no with confidence, yes with intention, and I protect my energy the way my ancestors protected the good cornbread recipe.”

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

#ThisPuzzledLife

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

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

-This Puzzled Life

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

#ThisPuzzledLife

Things I Trust More Than The CurrentAdministration: Mental Health Edition

Some days my mental health is held together by snacks, spite, and the sheer terror of having to explain myself to another human being. And honestly, that’s more stability than most systems offer.”

-This Puzzled Life

Light the charcoal. Sprinkle the sage. Let the ancestors clock in because I’m about to say something that requires spiritual PPE. Welcome back where the tea is hot. The coping skills are lukewarm. And the bar for institutional competence is lying somewhere under my therapist’s couch next to a rogue fidget cube and three generations of dust bunnies.

That’s the only proper way to open Things I Trust More Than the Current Administration: Mental Health Edition. The moment I even think about federal decision‑making and mental‑health infrastructure in the same sentence, my spirit guides start passing around clipboards like, “Everybody hydrate. This one’s gonna be long.” The energy gets so chaotic my coping skills start unionizing. My weighted blanket files a grievance. Even my therapist’s office plant, dead since the Bush administration, leans in like, “Girl, you good?”

And yet here we are. Gathered in this sacred digital sanctuary. Ready to name every ridiculous, raggedy, unexpectedly reliable thing that still manages to show up for my mental health more consistently than the systems allegedly designed to support it. Pull up a chair. Grab your emotional support beverage. And let’s begin this wellness séance.

Let me tell you something right now. As a lifelong member of the “I’ve been in therapy long enough to qualify for tenure” community, I have developed a sixth sense for nonsense. I can smell chaos before it even clocks in for its shift. I can hear a red flag rustling in the wind like a Confederate reenactor’s polyester uniform. And I can taste when a system is about to disappoint me.

If surviving American bureaucracy has taught me anything, It’s that my mental health journey has been held together with prayer, Post‑its, and the sheer willpower of every exhausted clinician who has ever said, “Let’s circle back to that. “And yet, even that feels sturdier than whatever the federal decision‑making process is doing right now.

Pull up a chair. Grab your emotional support beverage. And let’s talk about all the things big, small, and unhinged that I trust more than the folks allegedly steering this ship.

1. The coping skills handout they gave me in 2009 that said, “Try breathing.”

If breathing was going to fix my life, it would’ve done it by now. But you know what? That little laminated sheet has never lied to me, ghosted me, or changed its story mid-sentence. It just sits there, quietly suggesting oxygen like a supportive aunt.

2. The hospital blanket that feels like it was woven from recycled Brillo pads.

Scratchy? Yes. Comforting? Weirdly, yes. And it’s more reliable than any federal plan I’ve seen in the last decade? Tragically, yes again.

3. The therapy office plant that has been dead since Obama’s first term.

That plant has seen things. That plant has heard things. And that plant has never once pretended it was going to “circle back.”

4. The group therapy participant who always says, “I’m not sure if this is relevant,” and then drops the most relevant thing anyone has ever said.

That person is the backbone of America. That person deserves a medal, a parade, and a lifetime supply of fidget toys.

 5. The antidepressant that took six weeks to kick in and then said, “I’ll give you 12%.”

Twelve percent is still more than I’ve gotten from some institutions. Twelve percent is practically a stimulus package.

6. The crisis hotline hold music.

Is it soothing? No. Is it confusing? Yes. Does it at least show up? Also, yes. That’s more than I can say for some systems allegedly designed to “serve the people.”

7. The therapist who says, “Let’s unpack that,” knowing full well we’re about to open a suitcase from 1997.

Do I trust them? Absolutely. Do I trust the government to fund mental health care with the same enthusiasm? Let me just go ahead and laugh in Southern.

8. The mood tracker app that keeps asking if I’m “thriving.”

No, sweetheart. But I appreciate your optimism. And optimism is more than I’ve been handed by certain national infrastructures.

9. The weighted blanket that feels like it’s trying to smother me into emotional stability.

At least it’s trying.

10. My own intrusive thoughts.

Say what you want about them, but they’re consistent. They show up on time. And they don’t pivot their messaging halfway through the fiscal year.

And that concludes today’s testimony from the Church of High Copays and Low Patience. May your paperwork be accepted on the first try. May your therapist stay in‑network forever. And may your coping skills rise up like a well‑funded program. Because we all know the actual programs won’t.

May your coping skills be sturdy. Your boundaries be fortified. And your therapy bills be mysteriously covered by a benevolent universe. May every system that claims to care about mental health actually prove it with funding, access, and compassion. And may you always trust yourself more than any institution that has ever made you fill out the same form 14 times. The real administration is the one inside your head. And that cabinet meeting is already wild enough.

At the end of the day, my ragtag mental‑health toolkit with half vibes, and half stubbornness still shows up with more reliability than any administration that can’t streamline a single form. I’ll keep trusting my weighted blanket. I trust any system that doesn’t need three committees and a prayer to approve a budget. Even my intrusive thoughts have a better attendance record than the folks running the show. Amen, Ashe, and may the next fiscal year treat us better than the last. That’s the real plot twist I’m praying for.

Affirmation: I am doing the absolute most with the absolute least. And I’m still managing to shine. 

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

#ThisPuzzledLife