This Puzzled Life is a mental health and recovery blog exploring addiction, trauma healing, LGBTQ experiences, humor, and the strange moments that shape us.
“If you didn’t want to be in the music video, don’t stare at the man’s pound cake like it’s calling your name from the other side of the Jordan River.”
-This Puzzled Life
Light the charcoal. Sprinkle the sage. When I tell you the ancestors woke up early for this one? They clocked in. Put on their house shoes, and said, “We finna watch these cops get spiritually left standing there in emotional long johns in court today.” We are gathered here to celebrate a sacred Southern‑fried victory. Afroman just whooped the entire Adams County Sheriff’s Office in court using nothing but security‑cam receipts, a lemon pound cake, and the First Amendment. And I, a humble witness to chaos, am here to testify.
Picture this. Afroman was minding his business. Baking metaphorical pastries of peace. When suddenly BOOM! Ohio deputies bust into his home in 2022 looking for drugs, kidnapping victims, and apparently snacks. Because one officer got caught on camera staring at a lemon pound cake like it held the secrets of the universe.
They found no drugs, no victims, and no reason. But they did find themselves starring in a viral music video they did not audition for. And instead of taking the L quietly like normal embarrassed humans. They sued Afroman for defamation, emotional distress, and being too funny on the internet.
But the jury said, “Be so serious. This is America. We let people deep‑fry Oreos and marry their high‑school sweethearts three times. We’ll absolutely let Afroman clown y’all with your own security footage.”
Here’s the recipe for justice.
1 cup of police raid footage (shot by Afroman’s wife and his own security cams)
2 tablespoons of viral humiliation
A dash of “Why you disconnecting my video camera?”
A whole lemon pound cake
Bake at 350° until the First Amendment rises
The officers claimed their privacy was violated. The jury said, “Sweetie, you raided his house.” They claimed defamation. The jury said, “You did that to yourselves.” They claimed emotional distress. The jury said, “Try yoga.” And just like that, Afroman walked out of court cleared on all 13 counts. Surrounded by supporters hollering like it was Mardi Gras in March.
Afroman stepped outside the courthouse. Lifted his hands to the sky and declared, “We did it, America! Freedom of speech!” And that’s the kind of patriotic energy I want in my life. Not fireworks. Not bald eagles. Just a man with a lemon pound cake and a dream. Defeating a lawsuit with the power of satire and home security cameras.
So let this be a lesson to all who wander into someone’s home uninvited. If you raid a man’s house. Disconnect his cameras. Stare longingly at his baked goods. And then get immortalized in a music video. That’s not defamation. That’s a documentary. And as for Afroman? He didn’t just win a court case. He won the right to keep clowning publicly, loudly, and legally. Case closed. Cake served.
Affirmation: I move through life with Afroman energy. I’m unbothered, protected, and fully prepared to turn my haters into content.
“The cashier said, ‘Ma’am, this is plastic,’ and my soul left my body.”
-This Puzzled Life
Welcome to the finale, y’all. It’s time. Grab your sweet tea. Hide your valuables. Alert the clergy. This is the final chapter of this leprechaun‑cat catastrophe. The moment where all the glitter, chaos, and questionable decision‑making finally collide in one glorious, unhinged explosion of events.
By now, the cats have declared war on a leprechaun. Traumatized said leprechaun. Received a counterfeit gold coin. Triggered a magical escalation that absolutely should’ve required permits. And will attempt to spend it at Dollar General.
And now, in the grand finale, the universe has decided to respond with the same energy my cats bring to 3 a.m.zoomies.
Tinkerbell is polishing her “I told you so” face. Coco is updating her clipboard like she’s preparing for a congressional hearing. Piper is vibrating at a frequency only dogs and angels can hear. And me I’m just standing here. Holding my coffee. And wondering how my life became a crossover episode between National Geographic and Jerry Springer?
The leprechauns were gone. The glitter had settled. Piper was still hyped with the confidence of someone who absolutely did not deserve confidence. And then Coco said the six words that guaranteed chaos, “We should spend the gold coin.”
Tinkerbell froze mid‑lick.
Tinkerbell: “Where?”
Coco: “Dollar General.”
Piper screamed like she’d been chosen for The Hunger Games.
Piper: “Yes. Let’s buy treats and a laser pointer and maybe a small appliance.”
Tinkerbell: “We are not buying a small appliance.”
Piper: “A toaster.”
Tinkerbell: “No.”
I made the mistake of putting on shoes. The cats interpreted this as, “We are going on a field trip.” Before I could blink, Piper was in the tote bag. Coco was sitting by the door like she was waiting for an Uber. And Tinkerbell was already judging the entire outing. I sighed. They took that as consent.
The drive to Dollar General felt like escorting three tiny, unlicensed criminals to the scene of their future arrest. Piper was in the tote bag practicing her “customer service voice.” And it sounded like a gremlin trying to order at Starbucks. Coco was reviewing her clipboard like she was preparing to testify before Congress. Tinkerbell sat in the passenger seat with the energy of a grandmother who is already disappointed in everyone.
Tinkerbell: “If we get banned from Dollar General, I’m blaming all of you.”
Piper: “We’re not getting banned. We’re getting treats.”
Coco: “And justice.”
Me: “We’re getting Advil.”
We eventually pulled into the parking lot. The cats acted like we had arrived at Disney World. Piper tried to leap out of the tote bag like she was BASE‑jumping off a cliff. Coco strutted in like she owned the franchise. Tinkerbell walked with the slow, resigned dignity of someone who has accepted her fate.
Inside, the fluorescent lights buzzed like they were warning us.
Piper: “The treats are this way. I can smell them.”
Coco: “Stay focused. We have a mission.”
Tinkerbell: “I’m too old for this.”
They located their beloved Temptations with the precision of Navy SEALs. Piper hugged the bag. Coco inspected the expiration date. Tinkerbell sighed like she was filing for early retirement. And then, God help me, we approached the register.
The cashier was a sweet Southern woman with the patience of a preschool teacher. And the eyes of someone who has seen things like this before. She smiled at us. She shouldn’t have.
Cashier: “Did y’all find everything okay?”
Me: “Unfortunately, yes.”
Piper proudly placed the magical coin on the counter like she was presenting the Hope Diamond. Cashier picked it up. Squinted. Tapped it on the counter. And said the sentence that will haunt me until the day I die.
Cashier: “Ma’am, this is plastic.”
Coco gasped like she’d been shot.
Coco: “Plastic? Impossible. It’s enchanted.”
Tinkerbell: “It’s a toy, you idiot.”
Piper: “It’s currency in my heart.”
Me: “I can pay with my card.”
Cashier: “I’m gonna have to call my manager.”
Me internally: I’m going to jail because my cats tried to commit magical fraud.
Apparently, when someone tries to pay with counterfeit money, even if it’s glittery and shaped like a cartoon coin, Dollar General’s policy is to call the police.
Two officers walked in. One looked confused. The other looked tired. And both looked like they regretted their career choices.
Officer #1: “We got a call about counterfeit currency?”
Cashier: “They tried to pay with that.”
She pointed at the coin. Piper immediately sat on it like a dragon protecting her hoard.
Piper: “You’ll never take me alive.”
Officer #2: “Ma’am, are your cats talking?”
Me: “Not officially.”
Coco stepped forward like she was about to negotiate a hostage situation.
Coco: “We were deceived by a leprechaun. We demand justice.”
Officer #1 blinked three times.
Officer #1: “Ma’am, have you been drinking?”
Me: “Not enough.”
Tinkerbell: “We apologize for the inconvenience. We will pay with human money.”
Piper: “Traitor.”
The officers stared at us. Stared at the coin. Stared at the cats. Stared at the cashier. And then at each other. The universal look of two men deciding they do not get paid enough for this.
Officer #2: “Ma’am, please just pay for the treats and go home.”
Me: “Gladly.”
Piper: “This is oppression.”
Coco: “I’m filing a complaint.”
Tinkerbell: “I’m pretending I don’t know any of you.”
I paid. We left. The officers watched us go like they were witnessing a paranormal event they would never speak of again.
Back home, the cats held a tribunal.
Coco stared at the coin like it had personally betrayed her.
Coco: “I invested in this.”
Tinkerbell: “You invested in a toy.”
Piper: “Can I eat it?”
Me: “No.”
Piper: “Then what is the point of anything?”
She flopped dramatically onto the floor like a Victorian child fainting at a piano recital. The cashier stepped around her. Back at the house, the cats held a debriefing.
Tinkerbell: “We were deceived.”
Coco: “We were robbed.”
Piper: “I was promised treats.”
Tinkerbell: “We need a new plan.”
Coco: “We need revenge.”
Piper: “We need to summon him again.”
All three turned to me
Me: “Absolutely not.”
Piper: “But I have unfinished business.”
Tinkerbell: “You have unfinished brain cells.”
After hours of chaos, screaming, and Piper trying to bury the coin in a houseplant, the cats finally agreed on its purpose. It is now a sacred artifact. A symbol of their bravery. Their struggle. Their delusion. They placed it on a pillow like it was the Crown Jewel of Mississippi. Piper guards it at night. Coco audits it daily. Tinkerbell sighs every time she looks at it.
And me I’m just trying to live in a house where the cats almost started a war with generations of leprechauns. And then tried to buy Temptations with counterfeit currency.
And that, ladies, gentlemen, leprechauns, and emotionally unstable house pets, concludes the most unhinged St. Cat‑rick’s Day saga ever documented without federal oversight. The leprechauns have officially withdrawn from all diplomatic relations with my household. Ireland has blocked our number. The Fae Realm, large leprechaun family, has added our address to a “Do Not Teleport” list. And somewhere in a glitter covered forest, a council of magical beings is still screaming into a clipboard trying to process the paperwork.
Tinkerbell has retired from public service and now identifies as “just a house cat.” Coco has pivoted to writing a memoir titled “I Tried to Lead Idiots: A Survival Guide.” Piper is strutting through the house like she won the Revolutionary War, the Super Bowl, and a custody battle all at once. The gold coin sits on its velvet pillow like a cursed family heirloom. The living room still sparkles like a crime scene at a craft store. And I’m sweeping up glitter, wondering if this qualifies as a supernatural trauma response.
But one thing is certain, if the leprechauns ever return or the cats ever get another “idea.” Or if Piper ever screams “I have a plan” again, I’ll be right here coffee in hand documenting the chaos because apparently this is my calling, my ministry, and my tax write‑off. Thank you for surviving this saga with me. May your days be peaceful, your cats be calm, and your leprechauns stay in their lane. Series complete. Chaos eternal.
Affirmation: I am patient, even when my cats attempt financial crimes.
“Coco tried to negotiate. Piper tried to bite him. And Tinkerbell tried to pretend she didn’t know us.”
-This Puzzled Life
Light a candle. Grab a helmet. Alert the neighbors. And that’s when I knew this wasn’t just Part Two. This was divine punishment for every time I said, “My cats can’t possibly get any weirder.”Part Two begins with a sound no human should ever hear before coffee.
I was in the kitchen minding my business. And trying to decide whether coffee counts as a meal. When I heard a scream. Not a cat scream. Not a human scream. A scream that sounded like a kazoo having a panic attack.
I walked in and found a real leprechaun standing on my coffee table. He was looking like he’d been kidnapped by fate. And dropped directly into a house he did NOT have the emotional bandwidth for. My cats froze like they’d just seen a ghost, a rotisserie chicken, and the IRS all at once. The leprechaun adjusted his little green coat and glared at them.
Tinkerbell: “Oh Lord, he’s real.”
Coco: “We are so getting sued.”
Piper: “I call dibs on his ankles.”
Leprechaun: “Which one of ye hooligans set a trap made of catnip, cereal, and a shoelace”
Coco: “That would be Piper.”
Piper: “It was a strategic ankle‑biting device.”
Tinkerbell: “It was a cry for help.”
The leprechaun rubbed his temples like he suddenly understood why humans drink. Tinkerbell stepped forward with the confidence of a Southern grandmother about to negotiate a discount at Hobby Lobby.
Tinkerbell: “Sir, we’d like to offer you employment.”
Leprechaun: “Employment. As what.”
Coco: “Our butler.”
Piper: “Treat butler.”
Leprechaun: “I beg yer pardon.”
Tinkerbell: “You have thumbs. We don’t. It’s simple economics.”
The leprechaun stared at them like he was reconsidering the entire concept of magic. He made a run for it. Unfortunately for him, Piper also made a run for it. And she runs like a Roomba possessed by the Holy Spirit. She launched herself off the couch. Skidded across the hardwood. And slammed into the leprechaun like a furry bowling ball.
Leprechaun: “Lord above, get this creature off me!”
Piper: “I got him! I got the gold man!”
Tinkerbell: “Piper, release the hostage.”
Piper: “No. he’s mine!”
Coco: “Girl, you can’t just claim people like coupons.”
Once the leprechaun was upright again (and Piper was placed in a time‑out behind a baby gate), Tinkerbell attempted diplomacy.
Tinkerbell: “We don’t want to harm you. We simply want your gold.”
Leprechaun: “Absolutely not.”
Coco: “Okay, then we want your thumbs.”
Leprechaun: “Absolutely not.”
Piper:from behind the gate “I want his ankles.”
Tinkerbell: “Ignore her. She’s… spirited.”
After twenty minutes of arguing, bribery attempts, and Piper trying to chew through the baby gate like a raccoon, the leprechaun finally sighed.
Leprechaun: “Fine. I’ll give ye one coin if ye promise to never summon me again.”
Coco: “Deal.”
Tinkerbell: “Agreed.”
Piper: “Can I bite it to make sure it’s real?”
Leprechaun: “NO.”
He tossed the coin onto the rug, muttered something in Gaelic that I’m pretty sure was a curse, and vanished in a puff of glitter. Piper immediately tried to eat the coin. So now my cats have one magical gold coin, no butler, no thumbs, and a restraining order from the leprechaun realm. Disasters. Tinkerbell is drafting an apology letter to Ireland. Coco is Googling “how to invest one coin in crypto” Piper is behind a baby gate screaming, “I won the war!” And me? I’m just trying to drink my coffee in peace while living with three furry agents of chaos who almost started an international incident with the Fae.
And that, dear readers, is how my cats managed to terrify a magical creature, negotiate absolutely nothing, and still walk away with a gold coin that Piper immediately tried to swallow like it was communion. The leprechaun vanished in a puff of glitter, probably filing a complaint with the. The leprechaun vanished in a puff of glitter, probably filing a complaint with whatever Fae Department of Magical handles “feline‑related incidents.” is researching “how to retire on one coin.” Piper is behind a baby gate screaming, “I am the chosen one!” And me I’m just trying to figure out how to explain this to my therapist without getting put on a watchlist.
Don’t you worry. Part Three is on the way and trust me. The glitter storm hasn’t even peaked yet. Backup is on the way, and Piper is about to discover what consequences feel like. Stay tuned. Thanks for reading! Keep smiling.
Affirmation: I handle unexpected visitors with grace, unlike my cats who handle them with teeth.
“My system handles trauma like professionals. But the cats handle drama like they’re auditioning for a reality show called Real Housewives of the Litter Box.”
-This Puzzled Life
Light the charcoal. Sprinkle the sage. Secure the breakables. Today’s episode of This Puzzled Life features a full‑blown feline committee meeting after Piper, chaos in fur form, announced that she “might have Dissociative Identity Disorder.”
I have Dissociative Identity Disorder. Piper, however, is simply dramatic. And Tinkerbell and Coco are done with her antics. Welcome back where the sage is burning. The humidity is disrespectful. And the cats are holding more meetings than a Mississippi school board.
This morning started like any other. I was minding my business. Drinking my coffee. And trying to keep my nervous system from filing a complaint with HR. When Piper strutted into the room and announced that she “might have Dissociative Identity Disorder.” Before I could even blink, she was paw‑dialing my therapy coach like she had Blue Cross Blue Shield and a co‑pay. And that’s when Tinkerbell and Coco called an emergency meeting. Because apparently, in this house, I’m not the only one with a system. I’m just the only one with a diagnosis.
Tinkerbell climbed onto the arm of the couch like she was chairing a Mississippi church committee.
Tinkerbell: “This meeting will now come to order. Piper has made a claim. A bold one.”
Piper: “Ok. Well, there is no easy way to say this. I have DID.”
Tinkerbell: “Piper, having nine lives is not the same thing as having nine personalities. Stop confusing reincarnation with psychology.”
Coco: “Yeah, girl. Nine lives just means you make nine bad decisions. Not that you need nine therapists.”
Piper gasps, fluffs up, dramatic tail twitch
Piper: “Wow! So, nobody believes me? Nobody supports my journey? I’m being silenced. This is oppression. I’m calling coach right now!”
Coco: “You can’t even remember where you left your toy mouse. Sit down.”
Piper: “I am a complex being with layers!”
Tinkerbell: “You’re a lasagna with fur. Calm down.”
Coco flicked her tail like she was swatting away generational trauma.
Coco: “She doesn’t have DID. She has Too Much Drama Disorder.”
Piper, sprawled across a pillow like a Victorian widow, sighed dramatically.
Piper: “Sometimes I feel like different versions of me.”
Tinkerbell blinked slowly. The kind of blink that says, Lord, give me strength.
Piper sat up, whiskers trembling with self‑importance.
Piper: “Sometimes I’m sweet. Sometimes I’m spicy. Sometimes I’m feral. That’s at least three personalities.”
Coco rolled her eyes so hard she almost saw her past lives.
According to Piper, and only Piper, she “dissociates” at least three times a day. To everyone else in the house, she simply forgets what she’s doing because she’s Piper.
This morning, she was walking toward her food bowl with purpose, confidence, and the swagger of a cat who believes she pays rent. Halfway there, she froze. Stared into the void. And blinked like she’d just been unplugged and rebooted.
Tinkerbell watched her with the patience of a grandmother who’s seen too much.
Tinkerbell: “She’s not dissociating. She’s buffering.”
Coco flicked her tail
Coco: “That’s not a switch. That’s a brain fart.”
But Piper insisted.
Piper: “I think I dissociated. I forgot what I was doing.”
Tinkerbell sighed
Tinkerbell:“Sweetheart, you forget what you’re doing because you have the attention span of a dust bunny.”
Coco: “If staring at the wall counts as dissociating, then every cat on Earth needs a therapist.”
Piper, unbothered, continued staring into the middle distance like she was receiving messages from the universe.
Piper:“I just drifted away.”
Tinkerbell:“You drifted because you saw a dust particle and got confused.”
Coco: “You’re not dissociating. You’re daydreaming with commitment.”
Coco: “That’s called being a cat.”
Tinkerbell nodded
Tinkerbell: “You’re not special, darling. You’re just enthusiastic.”
Piper gasped like someone insulted her casserole at a church potluck.
Piper: “So you’re saying I’m dramatic?”
Coco: “I’m saying you’re Piper.”
This is where things went off the rails. Piper marched over to my phone. Tapped the screen with her paw, and said,
Piper: “I’m calling our therapy coach. I need a professional opinion.”
Tinkerbell nearly fell off the couch.
Tinkerbell: “Absolutely not. You are not dragging a licensed human into your nonsense.”
Coco leapt forward like she was blocking a football pass.
Coco: “Put the phone down. You don’t even know the passcode.”
Piper: “I know it’s numbers.”
Tinkerbell: “That is not enough.”
Piper: “I just want to ask if I have DID.”
Coco: “You don’t even have object permanence.”
Tinkerbell gestured toward me like she was presenting a case study.
Tinkerbell: “Our mom has DID. That’s a real thing. A trauma thing. A serious thing.”
Coco nodded, suddenly solemn
Coco: “She’s strong. She’s healing. She’s doing the work. You, on the other hand, tried to eat a rubber band yesterday.”
Piper: “It looked like a noodle.”
Tinkerbell: “It was not a noodle.”
Coco: “You’re not dissociating. You’re just unsupervised.”
Tinkerbell cleared her throat like a judge delivering a sentence
Tinkerbell: “Piper does not have DID. What she does have is excessive enthusiasm, poor impulse control, a flair for the dramatic, and a mother who spoils her.
Coco: “Case closed. Someone bring snacks.”
Piper: “I still think I should call the therapy coach.”
Tinkerbell: “If you touch that phone again, I’m calling Jesus.”
And as we wrap up this episode of Cats Who Need Supervision, I’ve realized something important. Living with DID is complex, sacred, and deeply human. But living with these cats is a full‑time job with no benefits and no union representation.
Some days my system is grounded and organized. Other days it’s buffering like a Dollar Tree Wi‑Fi router in a thunderstorm. And meanwhile, Piper is over here diagnosing herself with conditions she found on TikTok. Tinkerbell is exhausted. Coco is judging everyone. And Piper is still trying to call the therapy coach.
To all of us I wish healing, much laughter, surviving, and keeping the phone away from the cat who thinks she needs a treatment plan. And Piper? She’s grounded from the phone until further notice. Thanks for reading! Hug a cat if they let you.
Affirmation: Every part of you is powerful and worthy. And Piper, in all her chaotic glory, fully supports your healing while acting like she’s the self‑appointed spokesperson for your system.
“My brain runs like a full‑time committee meeting, and the cats still think they’re the ones in charge.”
-This Puzzled Life
Light the charcoal. Sprinkle the sage. Negative energy go away. Today’s blog is about Dissociative Identity Disorder. And three cats who have absolutely no business being professionally involved. But who insist on participating like they’re on salary.
Welcome to another episode of “My Life Is a Sitcom and Nobody Warned Me.” Secure your wigs. Because today we’re diving into DID Awareness also known as “Me, Myself, and the Entire Internal Group Chat.”
Living with DID means my brain runs like a committee meeting that could’ve been an email. And my cats act like they’re the board of directors.
Tinkerbell: “Your system is more organized than Congress.”
Coco: “At least y’all communicate.”
Piper: “If your brain ever needs a new member, I’m available.”
Me: “Piper, sweetheart, this is not American Idol: Internal System Edition.”
But here we are. Me, my parts, my healing journey, and three cats who think they’re licensed clinicians. And they are ready to bring some humor, honesty, and a little Southern seasoning to DID Awareness Month. Strap in. It’s about to get educational, emotional, and unnecessarily funny.
DID is one of those topics people whisper about like it’s a scandal, a secret, or the recipe for Coca‑Cola. But in this house? We talk about it openly, honestly, and with the kind of humor that keeps us from spontaneously combusting into a pile of stress glitter.
I have DID. Not “movie DID.” Not “Hollywood horror plot DID.” Actual, clinical, trauma‑born DID. It’s the kind that forms when a child survives more than any child ever should. And let me tell you, the cats have notes.
Tinkerbell (the wise elder): “Mom has a whole internal board of directors. I respect that. Some of y’all can’t even manage one mood.”
Coco (the judgmental aunt): “Honestly, the system is more organized than half the humans I’ve met. At least they communicate.”
Piper (chaos incarnate): “Do you think they’d let me join? I have ideas.”
Me: “Piper, this is not a talent show. This is a mental health condition.”
DID isn’t scary. It isn’t dangerous. It isn’t whatever nonsense Hollywood keeps trying to sell. It is a trauma response. A survival strategy. A brilliant adaptation. And a system built to protect a child who deserved safety. My system isn’t broken. It’s creative. It’s resilient. It’s the reason I’m still here. And the cats? They act like they’ve known every part since birth.
Tinkerbell: “Oh, this one likes soft blankets. Bring her the good one.”
Coco: “This one needs boundaries. I’ll supervise.”
Piper: “This one lets me climb the curtains.”
How does DID manifest? It is switching when overwhelmed and losing time. It’s different parts having different needs and internal conversations. It’s healing in layers. And learning to work as a team. It also looks like me drinking water because one part insists. Me resting because another refuses to push through. Me laughing because someone inside cracked a joke. And me healing because we’re doing this together. And the cats? They think they’re helping.
Coco: “I’m providing emotional support.”
Piper: “I’m providing chaos.”
Tinkerbell: “I’m providing supervision because these children need guidance.”
People with DID aren’t fragile. We aren’t dangerous. We aren’t confused. We aren’t “making it up.” We’re survivors. We’re complex. We’re healing. We’re doing the work. And we deserve understanding, not fear. Compassion, not judgment. Support, not silence.
Tinkerbell: “Respect the system. It’s doing its best.”
Coco: “Awareness is important. Also, snacks.”
Piper: “If your brain ever needs a new member, I’m available.”
Me: “Piper, absolutely not.”
And as we wrap up this little journey through DID Awareness Month, complete with sage smoke, hydration, internal committee meetings, and three cats who are my emotional support staff .
DID is basically like trying to reboot a Wi‑Fi router from 2007. While the cats are batting the cords. The universe is buffering. And one part is whispering, “Have you tried turning it off and back on again?”
Some days I’m gliding through life like a well‑oiled machine. Other days I’m switching, grounding, journaling, and negotiating with my nervous system like it’s a toddler who missed nap time. And occasionally, the whole system is like, “Ma’am, we were not built for this timeline.” Meanwhile, the cats are offering commentary like they’re on payroll.
Here’s to us choosing growth even when our brains are running on 3% battery. Choosing compassion even when our patience is on backorder. And choosing to keep going even when life feels like a Walmart parking lot at 2 a.m.
And then strut into the rest of your life like a woman who has survived every plot twist. Including the ones that arrived unannounced, barefoot, and holding a casserole of chaos. Because you’re still here. You’re still growing. And honestly? You’re doing better than half the people who think “self‑care” means buying a succulent and ignoring their feelings. Healing is holy. Humor is medicine. And I am too stubborn. I am too supported by my internal team and these judgmental cats to give up now. Thanks for reading! Keep moving forward.
Affirmation: I honor every part of my system. The strong ones, the soft ones, the tired ones, and the healing ones. I move through this world with resilience, humor, and a whole internal team that refuses to give up on me. I am whole, worthy, supported, and doing beautifully, no matter who’s fronting or which cat thinks they’re in charge today.
“I trust bad vibes, random coincidences, and my toaster more than this administration.”
-Unknown
Light the charcoal. Sprinkle the sage. Negative energy go away. Today’s blog is not just a list. It’s a public service announcement. A spiritual awakening. And a petty masterpiece crafted by a woman who has seen too much, heard too much, and tripped in public too many times to stay silent.
I woke up this morning. Turned on the news. And immediately felt my soul pack a suitcase and whisper, “I’ll be at the Motel 6 if you need me.” Piper gasped like she was watching a telenovela. Coco clutched her imaginary pearls. Tinkerbell just sighed the sigh of a woman who has lived through 14 administrations and is spiritually moisturized enough to handle anything.
And that’s when I knew it was time. Time to document Things I Trust More Than the Current Administration. It’s a list so chaotic, so accurate, and so spiritually petty that even my ancestors leaned in like, “Go on, baby. Tell it.” So, grab your snacks, your beads, your emotional support beverage, and your sense of humor. This is about to get disrespectful in a healing way.
1. My flip‑flops.
Yes. It’s the same flip‑flops that tried to assassinate me in slow motion. The ones with the structural integrity of a soggy communion wafer. The ones that folded like a cheap lawn chair at a family reunion. Still more dependable.
Tinkerbell: “At least the flip‑flops don’t lie on television.”
2. Piper’s decision‑making skills.
This is the same creature who ate a sparkly Pride bandana. Who tried to flash her nonexistent cat boobs for beads. And who attempted to unionize against bedtime. And yet? I trust her more.
Piper: “I make bold choices. Not good ones. But bold.”
3. A gas station egg salad sandwich.
Expiration date: unknown. Smell: concerning. Texture: illegal. But at least it’s honest about the danger.
Coco: “It may kill you, but it won’t gaslight you.”
4. A toddler holding a permanent marker.
Will they draw on the wall or the dog or their own face? Yes. But at least you know chaos is coming.
5. A goose with a clipboard.
He’s honking. He’s chasing people. He’s eating paperwork. But he believes in his mission.
Piper: “That’s passion. I respect it.”
6. My own ability to walk in flip‑flops.
History says no. Physics says no. Gravity says “Absolutely No.” But I still trust myself more.
Coco: “Bold of you.”
7. The cats’ ability to behave in public.
They have caused a Mardi Gras incident. Stolen a praline. Gotten into a legal dispute with NOPD. And started a jazz band. And yet? More trustworthy.
8. A Walmart shopping cart with one broken wheel.
It squeaks. It veers left. It shakes like it’s possessed. But it’s trying its best.
9. A fortune cookie written by someone who was clearly drunk.
“Your future is… something.” Same, babe. Same.
10. Ebola
At least Ebola is upfront like, “I’m dangerous. Stay away.” No mixed messages. No confusion. Just pure, uncut honesty.
Tinkerbell: “Clarity is a love language.”
11. Jeffrey Dahmer’s dinner invitations
Not attending. Not RSVPing. Not even opening the envelope. But at least you KNOW what you’re getting into. There’s no mystery. No surprises. Just a firm, “No thank you, sir,” and a quick jog in the opposite direction.
Coco: “Predictability matters.”
12. Jim Jones’ Kool‑Aid recipe
Not drinking it. Not smelling it. Not being in the same ZIP code as it. But I trust that it will do exactly what it promises. No false advertising. No fine print. Just consequences.
Piper: “At least it’s consistent.”
13. COVID 1‑19
The actual virus. Because COVID shows up like, “Hey girl, I’m back.” And honestly? I respect the commitment to the bit. It’s the ex who keeps returning but at least texts first.
Tinkerbell: “Reliability is reliability, even when it’s terrible.”
14. A stomach virus
It doesn’t lie. It doesn’t pretend. It doesn’t gaslight you. It just shows up at 3 AM like, “Hope you didn’t have plans today.”
Coco: “At least it’s punctual.”
15. A fart when I have amoebic dysentery
This is the MOST untrustworthy thing on Earth. A gamble. A spiritual test. A moment where your soul leaves your body and watches from the ceiling. And yet, still more trustworthy.
Piper: “High‑risk, high‑reward.”
Tinkerbell: “Baby, that’s not a fart. That’s a prophecy.”
16. A gas station hotdog that’s been spinning since 2014
At least it hasn’t claimed to have a plan for the country.
17. My cats’ understanding of personal space
They don’t respects boundaries, much the administration. But they’re consistent about something.
18. A psychic named Debra who accepts Venmo
Makes promises you can verify immediately.
19. My phone’s autocorrect
Provides helpful suggestions, not false promises.
20. The voice in my head that says, “this is a bad idea.”
Offers accountability before the disaster.
And do you know what? None of them have access to nuclear codes.
And so, after reviewing flip‑flops with abandonment issues, geese with clipboards, and Piper’s ongoing feud with law enforcement, one truth remains. There are many things in this world more trustworthy than the current administration. And most of them should not be legally trusted at all. But here we are. Surviving. Thriving. Spiritually hydrated. Held together by snacks, sarcasm, and the emotional support of three cats who have never paid taxes but have very strong opinions.
Piper is already drafting her own State of the Union. Coco is fact‑checking it with a glass of imaginary wine. Tinkerbell is praying for all of us. As for me? I’m lighting the sage again. Because after this list, the energy in here needs a full exorcism. And remember, “If chaos is inevitable, at least make it funny.” Thanks for reading! Keep resisting.
Affirmation: “I move through this chaotic timeline with the resilience of a goose with a clipboard, and the unhinged optimism of someone who still trusts a fart during amoebic dysentery more than the people allegedly running the country.”
“Politics is just humans arguing in circles. Cats understand the truth: sit on the highest perch, knock over what no longer serves you, and nap through the drama.”
-Unknown
Light the charcoal. Sprinkle the sage. Negative energy go away. Because today’s blog is a political circus, as told by three cats who have never paid taxes, never voted, and yet somehow believe they understand the system better than any human alive. Sit back and enjoy the girls’ explanation about the chaos of government.
Tinkerbell: “Gather around. The Big Orange Cat is speaking again.”
Coco: “Speaking? He’s yelling. He always yells. Why do humans elect creatures who yell?”
Piper: “I don’t know. But all the other cats around him are making faces like he might’ve pooped out of the litter box.”
Me: “He’s not actually our leader. He’s a waste of fur. He’s just loves hearing his gums flap.”
Tinkerbell: “Then why is he in a fancy room with gold curtains?”
Me: “Because humans make choices.”
Coco: “Poor ones.”
Tinkerbell: “Who are these other creatures around him?”
Me: “His cabinet.”
Piper: “Like furniture?”
Coco: “No, idiot. Advisors. Though honestly, furniture might do a better job.”
Tinkerbell: “I see a raccoon with a briefcase. A goose with a badge. A possum asleep under the table.”
Me: “That’s surprisingly accurate.”
Piper: “Why is the goose in charge of paperwork?”
Coco: “Because humans love chaos.”
Me: “Well, he is also involved in a coverup regarding “The Catstein Files.” Okay, this channel is supposed to explain what’s happening.”
Coco: “All I hear is squawking.”
Piper: “They’re parrots! They repeat everything! This is amazing!”
Tinkerbell: “They are not reporting. They are echoing. Loudly. With feathers.”
Coco: “One of them just said “BREAKING NEWS” for the fourth time in ten minutes.”
Piper: “BREAKING NEWS: I knocked over a plant.”
Coco: “BREAKING NEWS: No one is surprised.”
Tinkerbell: “Why are those geese chasing people?”
Me: “That’s LICE a Border Patrol Enforcement Agency.”
Coco: “Enforcement? They’re honking aggressively and losing their paperwork.”
Piper: “One of them is eating the paperwork.”
Tinkerbell: “Truly, a symbol of government efficiency.”
Me: “They’re supposed to keep things organized.”
Coco: “They can’t even keep their feathers organized. And what is that thing on his head?”
Me: “That is a fur piece he saved and put on his head. He calls it a hairstyle. But it looks like a gigantic, runaway hairball.”
Tinkerbell: “Well, you would have to see his cat parents to understand where his hideous genetics originated. I have lived many lives. I have seen many things. But this is the most chaotic government I have ever witnessed.”
Coco: “If humans ran the world like cats, everything would be better. Step one: naps. Step two: snacks. Step three: no yelling.”
Piper: “Step four: chase the geese.”
Coco: “Piper, no.”
Piper: “Piper, YES!”
After reviewing the Big Orange Cat, the raccoon cabinet, the parrot news network, and the goose enforcement squad, my cats have reached a unanimous conclusion, that humans should not be in charge of anything. Not governments. Not agencies. Not news. Not even their own shoes. If cats ran the world, it would be quieter, cleaner, and significantly fluffier. Though admittedly, nothing would ever get done because everyone would be asleep. Thanks for reading! And stand up for your rights and the rights of others.
Affirmation:I remain calm, centered, and spiritually moisturized, even when the world behaves like a raccoon run cabinet meeting where parrots scream policy updates and geese with clipboards chase each other in circles.