The Divine Blueprint Includes Queer People and Zero Homophobia

“If God made us in the divine image. Then queerness is not a rebellion. It’s a reflection.”

-This Puzzled Life

Light the charcoal. Sprinkle the sage. Today, we’re not just cleansing the room. We’re cleansing the ignorance. We’re diving into the science of being gay. Which is the most Southern thing ever. 

Everybody’s got an opinion. Nobody’s read the research. Half the town swears they “just know” because their cousin’s friend’s nephew once wore a sequined vest to Vacation Bible School. And trustmebro.com is their only source.

Unlike the folks who think sexual orientation is a “lifestyle choice,” we’re going straight to the biology, the hormones, the genetics, the epigenetics, and the brain science. And yes, science says queer folks aren’t broken, confused, rebellious, or possessed by a demon named Carl. We’re just built this way. Literally. Cellularly. Hormonally. Neurobiologically. Now let’s get into it.

Scientists have found that sexual orientation has genetic components. This means that some of us were coded a little extra fabulous from the jump. Research shows multiple genes contribute to sexual orientation. Sorry but it’s not a single “gay gene” that’s being held responsible. It’s a constellation of them. Think of it like a queer genetic gumbo. A little chromosome spice here. A little epigenetic roux there.

 Source: ArcGIS Story Maps overview of genetics, hormones, and neurobiology in sexual orientation 

Epigenetics is basically the universe’s way of saying, “Let me sprinkle a little glitter on these genes and see what happens.” Epigenetic markers can influence how genes express themselves. Especially those involved in sexual differentiation and attraction. These markers can be shaped by hormones, environment, and developmental timing. They don’t rewrite your DNA. They just DJ the playlist.

Source: Chapter on epigenetics and sexual orientation from UCLA researchers 

Before you ever took your first breath, your brain was marinating in a hormonal jambalaya. And those hormones? They matter a lot. Studies show that prenatal hormone exposure, especially androgens, plays a major role in shaping later sexual orientation.These hormones influence brain structures tied to attraction. And they help determine whether your brain lights up like a Christmas tree for men, women, both, or neither.

Source: Prenatal hormone theory of sexual orientation 

Neuroscience research shows differences in brain regions related to attraction, behavior, and sensory processing. These differences aren’t “defects.” They’re natural variations. They show up consistently across studies, across cultures, and across time.

Source: OpenStax Behavioral Neuroscience on sex-linked brain differences 

The most accurate scientific conclusion? Sexual orientation is shaped by genetics, hormones, brain development, and environment. It’s a complex, beautiful interplay that makes each queer person a one‑of‑a‑kind masterpiece.

Source: University Observer on genetics + environment in sexual orientation 

Here comes the cat‑powered theological commentary you didn’t know you needed but absolutely deserved. 

Your living room. Sage still smoking. Charcoal still glowing. You’re typing. And the cats have convened an emergency meeting of the Queer Science & Spirituality Committee.

Tinkerbell (Union Rep, Conspiracy Theorist): “Alright, everyone, settle down. We need to address the ongoing crisis. Conservative humans still think Bible verses are part of the genetic code.”

Piper (Chaotic Neutral Gremlin):  “Honestly, I checked the genome myself. Not a single verse. Not even a stray Corinthians. Just DNA doing its thing like it’s supposed to.”

Coco (CEO, Sunbeam High Priestess): “Yeah, but conservatives act like chromosomes come pre‑loaded with Leviticus. Like God was up there knitting embryos saying, ‘Let me just stitch in a little homophobia for flavor.’”

Tinkerbell: “Exactly. Meanwhile, real Christians, the ones with functioning empathy, are over here like, ‘Science exists. Biology is real. Love your neighbor. Stop weaponizing scripture like it’s a Nerf gun with anger issues.’”

Piper: “And let’s be clear. Bible verses are not molecules. They’re not proteins. They’re not alleles. They’re not epigenetic markers. They’re not even in the mitochondria. And that’s the drama queen of the cell.”

Coco: “Bible verses are opinions written down a long time ago that conservatives now use like emotional nunchucks.”

Tinkerbell: “Exactly. They’re not part of anyone’s genetic makeup. They’re part of someone’s political makeup.”

Piper: “And the anger? Whew. That’s not holy. That’s not righteous. That’s not divine. That’s just unresolved childhood issues marinated in Fox News.”

Coco: “Real Christians aren’t out here screaming at gay people. Real Christians are like, ‘Hey, science is cool. Love is cool. Jesus literally never said anything about queer folks. Y’all need a nap.’”

Tinkerbell: “Honestly, if conservatives want to talk about genetics, they should start with the hereditary nature of minding your own business.

Piper: “Science says gay people exist naturally.” 

Tinkerbell: “Faith says love your neighbor.” 

Coco: “Conservatives say whatever their pastor yelled last Sunday.”

And that’s the absurdity of it all. The cats have spoken. The meeting is adjourned. Snacks will be served in the kitchen.

Let’s just go ahead and say the quiet part with our whole diaphragm. If theology is correct. If we are truly made in the image of God. Then God’s image is not some beige, monotone, heterosexual stick figure with a side part and a fear of sequins. No. Absolutely not. The math ain’t mathing.

Because if queer people exist. And we do, loudly, beautifully, and biologically. Then queerness is not a glitch in the system. It’s part of the blueprint. Which means God’s image includes queer joy, queer love, queer brilliance, queer softness, queer resilience, queer creativity, and queer fabulousness. If we’re reflections of the divine? Then the divine must contain all the colors we carry. And that’s a lot of colors.

Let’s talk about the rainbow for a second. Conservatives love to act like queer folks “stold” it. As if we broke into Heaven’s craft closet and ran off with God’s Crayola box. But if God created the rainbow. And theology says God did. Then God created a symbol of diversity, beauty, and spectrum. A spectrum of light. A spectrum of identity. A spectrum of creation.

And you’re telling me the same God who painted the sky with a multicolored arc after a storm didn’t know that one day queer people would claim it as our banner? Please. God knew exactly what God was doing. The rainbow is divine foreshadowing. A cosmic wink. A holy Easter egg. A celestial “just wait, y’all.”

If God’s image includes all of humanity. Then queer people aren’t the exception. We’re the evidence. The evidence that God loves variety. The evidence that creation is not limited to one shape, one love, or one expression. The evidence that the divine is not threatened by color, complexity, or creativity.

Queer people are the parts of God’s image that sparkle. The parts that dance. The parts that refuse to shrink. The parts that remind the world that holiness isn’t about conformity. It’s about authenticity. Queer people are the divine’s flair. God’s glitter. God’s jazz hands. God’s reminder that creation is supposed to be vibrant, not beige.

Not the corporate kind. Not the “rainbow logo in June only” kind. Not the “love the sinner, hate the sin” kind. I mean the real kind. The kind who understands science. The kind who celebrates diversity. The kind who doesn’t weaponize scripture to justify fear. The kind who looks at queer people and says, “Yes. I made you. And I made you on purpose.”

If we’re made in God’s image. Then God’s image includes every queer soul who has ever existed in past, present, and future. Which means God is not just a Pride ally. God is the original Pride ally.

The first one to paint the sky in rainbow. The first one to celebrate diversity. The first one to say, “Let there be light.” And then break that light into a spectrum.

The next time someone says, “Being gay is a choice.” Smile sweetly. Bless their heart. And say, “The only choice I made today was whether to wear the boots or the heels. My sexual orientation was assembled in the womb like a limited‑edition collector’s item.” Let the science do the talking. Being gay isn’t a phase, a fad, or a political statement. It’s biology. And biology don’t lie.

So here we are. Charcoal glowing like an altar to common sense. Sage swirling like ancestral Wi‑Fi. And the cats still muttering about conservatives trying to splice Leviticus into the double helix like it’s a DIY craft project.

The science is clear. The biology is clear. The genetics, the hormones, the brain structures are all clear. The only thing foggy is the worldview of people who think sexual orientation is a rebellious phase. But their own anger is a divine calling.

Bible verses are not molecules. They are not nucleotides. They are not tucked between adenine and thymine like a passive‑aggressive Post‑it from God. They’re words. Words that can heal or harm depending on who’s holding them. And conservatives have been swinging them around like rusty machetes. And trying to carve their fear into other people’s lives.

But the real Christians. The ones who actually read the parts about compassion, humility, and minding your own business, they just know better. They know science isn’t the enemy. They know biology isn’t propaganda. They know Jesus didn’t come down here to micromanage who anyone loves. Real Christians don’t need queer people to shrink so they can feel tall. They don’t need to weaponize scripture to justify their discomfort. They don’t need to pretend their prejudice is holy.

They understand something conservatives keep tripping over. Faith and science are not rivals. They are two different languages describing the same universe. One is poetic. One is empirical. And both are pointing toward truth.

And the truth is this. Queer people exist because nature made us. Biology shaped us. And diversity is the signature of life itself. We are not mistakes. We are not warnings. We are not tests of anyone’s faith. We are living, breathing evidence that creation loves variety.

Bless the room. Bless the science. Bless the ancestors. Bless the queer babies still figuring out their shine. And to anyone still clinging to ignorance like it’s a family heirloom, may your heart soften. Your mind open. And your Bible fall open to literally any page that isn’t being used as a weapon. The science is settled. The spirit is settled. And the cats are settled. And the only unsettled thing left is the people who can’t handle the truth that queerness is natural, holy, and here to stay. Thanks for reading! Happy Pride Yall!

Affirmation: I am a radiant, intentional part of creation. My identity is not a mistake, phase, or a debate. It is a divine color in the spectrum of existence. And I shine without apology.

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

#ThisPuzzledLife

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

Mental Health Awareness Month: A Southern Survival Guide for an Unwell Nation

“My mental health is held together by therapy, hydration, and three cats who refuse to let me spiral in peace.”

-This Puzzled Life

Light the charcoal. It’s Mental Health Awareness Month. And the collective mental state of this country is giving ‘a church van with three bald tires and a prayer.” The nation’s mental health is hanging on by a thread, a prayer, and a prescription refill reminder.

And let’s be honest. This crisis didn’t start at the bottom. No ma’am. We’ve got a mental‑health crisis starting at the top. And it’s dripping like a busted AC unit in August. Our leadership is acting like a Facebook comment section that’s surrounded by red‑hat followers cheering like it’s a halftime show. They treat conspiracy theories like gospel. And emotional regulation as a foreign language.

Meanwhile, my cats have entered the chat. Nothing says “mental health check‑in” like three judgmental felines watching the country unravel while demanding snacks. My cats have already staged an intervention.

Piper lit the sage herself. Coco is pacing like she’s waiting on election results. And Tinkerbell is under the couch. Because she said the national energy feels “crunchy.” She sits like a therapist who’s out of network. And blinking slowly at the news like, “This is why y’all need boundaries.” She watches the red‑hat crowd on TV and immediately starts grooming herself. Because she knows you can’t let that kind of energy stick to your fur.

Coco has diagnosed the nation with “Too Much Foolishness Disorder.” Her treatment plan includes knocking pens off the table. Screaming at 3 a.m. And sitting directly on your chest until you confront your feelings. She sees the state of the country and says, “Oh, we’re all unwell? Bet.” Then she sprints down the hallway like she’s reenacting the national mood.

Piper is the emotional support animal who needs emotional support. She watches the president on TV. Tilts her head and walks away like, “I don’t know what that is. But it’s not stable.” Then she curls up in your lap. Even she knows the collective anxiety is loud.

In May, we gather as a nation to say, “Let’s take care of our minds.” And every May the nation responds, “Absolutely. Right after I argue with strangers online about things I don’t understand.” Therapists are tired. Teachers are tired. Nurses are tired. Your cats are tired. You are tired. The ancestors are tired. Even the houseplants are like, “Girl, water me and breathe.”

Down Here in the South we’re doing our best. We’re lighting candles. We’re praying. We’re drinking water. We’re trying to heal generational trauma. While also trying to find the good scissors.

The collective Southern mental state is basically, “I’m fine.” Translation is that I have cried in the laundry room twice today. And if one more person asks me what’s for dinner, I’m moving into the woods.” Piper nods. Coco screams. Tinkerbell knocks something off the counter. It’s a family effort.

What do we do? We breathe. We hydrate. We take our meds. We go to therapy. We stop arguing with people who think facts are optional. We light the charcoal and let the sage smoke carry away the foolishness. And we listen to the cats. They’ve been trying to tell us, “Rest is resistance. Snacks are medicine. Boundaries are holy.”If we’re going to survive this era with its chaos, noise, and its red‑hat circus energy, we’re going to need hydration, humor, therapy, and at least one cat supervising our coping mechanisms. This country needs therapy, hydration, and a nap that lasts until at least 2028.

Piper has officially closed her laptop and declared she’s unavailable for further foolishness. And has already clocked out and put her paw over the “Do Not Disturb” sign. Coco is stress eating treats like she’s watching a season finale. And she is filing paperwork with HR titled “The Nation Is Acting Up Again.” Tinkerbell has curled up on my chest because she said, “the nation’s anxiety is too loud and she’s clocking out.” And has declared the vibes unconstitutional and gone to bed. 

If the world insists on acting unwell, then we’ll heal anyway. Loudly, joyfully, and with three cats as our emotional support security detail. Bless your boundaries, your brain cells, and your blood pressure. Now go forth and protect your peace like it’s the last biscuit at Sunday dinner. Thanks for reading! Get your ass in therapy.

Affirmation: I honor my mind, protect my peace, and set boundaries so firm even Coco won’t cross them.

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

#ThisPuzzledLife

Happy 420: High Times and Hairballs Edition

“On 4/20, my cats don’t judge my vibes. They just steal my snacks and act like they invented relaxation.”

-Unknown

 Light the charcoal. Sprinkle the sage. Negative energy go away. Today’s blog is not just a vibe. If you’re new here, welcome to This Puzzled Life. It’s where the energy is always slightly unhinged. The cats have more personality than sense. And the universe occasionally sends Snoop Dogg to supervise whatever nonsense is happening in the living room.

The living room is suspiciously calm. It’s the kind of calm that makes you immediately assume someone is doing something they shouldn’t. A sunbeam is stretched across the floor like it’s been blessed by the universe. And glowing so dramatically it could sell skincare. Even the dust particles look like they’re floating around with purpose.

I step in and instantly sense that my cats are acting extra mellow. Not normal mellow. Not “we napped for six hours” mellow. But “did someone replace our brains with warm mashed potatoes?” mellow. Tinkerbell is melted into the sunbeam like a retired yoga instructor. Coco is staring at the wall like it just revealed a plot twist. And Piper is on her back. And smiling at the ceiling like she’s discovered enlightenment or a new conspiracy theory.

You haven’t even lit your stinky healing medication yet. And somehow the cats are already vibing harder than you. It’s a full‑blown 4/20 circus starring one human with “smelly healing medication.” Three judgmental cats. And a surprise cameo from Snoop Dogg. And he absolutely did not sign up for the chaos he walked into.

Me: “Okay. Why is everyone staring at the wall like it owes them money?”

Tinkerbell: “Shhh. Today is sacred. Today is 4/20. The Day of Chill. The Festival of Vibes.”

Coco: “It’s the holiday where humans get very relaxed. And eat snacks like they’re being timed.”

Piper: “Snacks? I love snacks!”

 falls over dramatically

Me: “Sweetheart, you fall over every day. That’s not a holiday thing. That’s a “you” thing.”

Tinkerbell: “As High Priestess of the Sunbeam, I declare this a day of peace, softness, and staring at nothing with great purpose.”

Coco: “Basically, we’re honoring the humans’ tradition of being extremely chill.”

Me: “I’m not even doing anything.”

Coco: “Exactly. You’re participating beautifully.”

Piper: “So what do we do for 4/20?”

Tinkerbell: “Step one: Melt into the sunbeam. Become one with the floor. Let your bones go on vacation.”

https://share.icloud.com/photos/0a1nq9NaEX2HZutftMFG8Qw_w

Piper: “I’m melting!”

flops like a warm pancake

Me: “You look like a microwaved quesadilla.”

Tinkerbell: “Step two: Eat snacks until you forget what time is.”

Me: “That explains the empty treat bag.”

Coco: “We were spiritually aligned with the holiday.”

Me: “You were spiritually aligned with theft.”

Tinkerbell: “Step three: Stare at something very intensely for no reason. A wall. A shoe. A ghost only you can see.”

Piper: “I see ghosts all the time!”

Coco: “We know. You scream at the air at 3 a.m.”

Me: “I thought that was a demon. Turns out it was just Piper yelling at dust.”

Piper: “So 4/20 is just being cozy and happy?”

Tinkerbell: “Exactly. A day of calm. A day of peace. A day where even Coco stops judging.”

Coco: “Let’s not lie to the child.”

Me: “Can we all agree to just vibe today?”

All Three Cats: “Yes.”

Me: “Okay, I lit the charcoal, I sprinkled the sage, and now I’m lighting the stinky healing medication. Let the vibes begin.”

Tinkerbell: “The air smells like regret and pinecones.”

Coco: “Is this the thing that makes you stare at the fridge for 20 minutes?”

Piper: “I like it! It smells like adventure!”

Me: “It’s medicine. It helps me chill, breathe, and not spiral into existential dread when the dishwasher beeps.”

Tinkerbell: “I respect your rituals. But the vibe is missing something.”

Snoop Dogg: “Y’all rang?”

Coco: “Oh my God it’s Snoop Dogg!”

Piper: “I thought you were a myth! Like the sock monster or the concept of “boundaries”!”

Piper: “Bow‑wow‑smooth‑wow, sunshine on my tail now, rollin’ in the vibe cloud!” (Still off‑key. Still confident. Still wrong.”

Me: “Oh no. She’s about to do The Thing.”

Coco: “Brace yourselves. Her legs are about to file for divorce.”

Tinkerbell: “Let the child embarrass herself. It builds character.”

Piper: “Watch this, Uncle Snoop!” 

starts doing a chaotic little foot shuffle that looks like she’s trying to tap dance, moonwalk, and dodge imaginary lasers at the same time

Me: “Piper, baby, that’s not a dance. That’s a medical mystery.”

Coco: “She’s moving like her paws are buffering.”

Tinkerbell: “I’ve seen spilled noodles with more coordination.”

laughing so hard he has to hold onto the couch

Snoop Dogg: “Lil mama. I don’t know what that move is, but it’s definitely somethin’.”

Piper: “It’s my signature move. I call it “The Vibey Shuffle of Destiny.”

Me: “It looks like your feet are arguing.”

Coco: “It looks like gravity is winning.”

Tinkerbell: “It looks like performance art created by someone who’s never seen a performance.”

Piper: “I am the beat! spins, falls, gets up, keeps going like a tiny furry warrior.”

Snoop: “Ayy… she fearless though. Every squad needs one member who dances like the floor is giving them secret instructions.”

Piper: “Thank you, Snoop. I am an icon.”

Coco: “You are a hazard.”

Snoop: “Nah, lil homie. I’m real. And I came to bless this 4/20 with peace, love, and a whole lotta chill.”

Me: “Snoop, I’m honored. I’ve got my smelly healing medication, my cats, and a sunbeam. What else do I need?”

Snoop: “You need to relax, vibe, and let the universe do its thing. Also snacks. Never forget the snacks.”

Tinkerbell: “I’m melting into the sunbeam now. I am one with the carpet.”

Coco: “I’m still judging, but I’m doing it with rhythm.”

Piper: “I’m vibing so hard I forgot how to blink.”

Snoop: “That’s the spirit. 4/20 ain’t just about the smoke. It’s about the soul. The healing. The joy. The softness. The unapologetic chill.”

Me: “Can you stay forever?”

Snoop: “I’m always here in the vibe. In the playlist. In the part of your brain that says, “you deserve rest.”

Tinkerbell: “I respect your rituals. But the house smells like a skunk got promoted to shaman.”

Coco: “I Googled it. Apparently, humans use this plant to “relax.” You don’t look relaxed. You look like you’re trying to remember your own name.”

Me: “That’s part of the process.”

Piper: “Can I have some?”

Me: “Absolutely not. You’re already chaotic enough. You tried to fight a sock yesterday.”

Piper: “It was looking at me funny.”

Tinkerbell: “So what does this “healing medication” actually do?”

Me: “It helps my body feel less like a haunted house. It quiets the noise. It softens the edges. It makes the world feel less like it’s yelling.”

Coco: “And it makes you eat cereal at 2 a.m.”

Me: “That too.”

Piper: “I like this holiday. You’re soft and giggly and you dropped a treat on the floor.”

Tinkerbell: “I still think it smells like a wizard’s armpit.”

Me: “It’s not for everyone. But it’s for me. And today, we honor the healing. Even if it’s stinky.”

So today, as you celebrate 4/20 the way your cats would want: with softness, silliness, sunbeams, snacks, and a healthy dose of “what is that smell?” A day where the world slows down, the energy softens, and the only thing on the agenda is vibes.

May your medicine heal. May your cats judge you lovingly. May your snacks be plentiful. May your cats be mellow little chaos muffins. And may you, like Tinkerbell, Coco, and Piper, find a sunbeam and melt into it. Thanks for reading! And keep blazin.’

Affirmation: On 4/20, I embrace my inner cat: I stretch, I snack, I vibe, and I refuse to explain myself to anyone.

***Don’t forget to watch the video!”

#ThisPuzzledLife

Reefer Madness: The Original ‘Fake News’ Tornado

“If the smell of cannabis could kill you, half the country would’ve dropped dead at a Snoop Dogg concert.”

-This Puzzled Life

Light the charcoal. Pull up a lawn chair. And pour yourself a glass of sweet tea so strong it could dissolve a horseshoe. Today,  we’re about to roast one of the biggest cultural catastrophes ever sold to the American public, Reefer Madness. This was the original “fake news tornado.” The 1936 panic‑propaganda film that convinced America, coast to coast, that cannabis was basically Satan doing the two‑step in your living room. A film so dramatic it made Pentecostal revivals look subtle. A film so unhinged it claimed one puff of cannabis would turn your teenager into a jazz‑addicted, piano‑smashing menace to society.

If Reefer Madness came out today, it would be labeled satire and streamed on Hulu between a cult documentary and a reality show about doomsday preppers. But back then? Folks ate it up like it was gospel. And while the whole country swallowed the hysteria, the South, with its love of moral order, church‑based authority, and “protect the children” politics, became one of the loudest amplifiers of the panic. And the smoke from that lie is still hanging in the air.

Reefer Madness didn’t just sprout up like a weed in the yard. It was engineered. And cooked up like a casserole nobody asked for.

1. Harry Anslinger needed a new villain

When alcohol prohibition ended, Harry Anslinger, head of the Federal Bureau of Narcotics, needed a new enemy to stay relevant. He chose cannabis and went full Broadway villain about it. 

Source: U.S. National Archives; NPR reporting on Anslinger’s anti‑cannabis campaign. https://www.npr.org/sections/codeswitch/2013/07/14/201981025/the-racist-roots-of-marijuana-prohibition (npr.org in Bing).

2. Racist fearmongering was the secret ingredient

Anslinger pushed the idea that cannabis made Black and Mexican communities violent or “unpredictable,” and newspapers ran with it like it was scripture. Source:Smithsonian Magazine; Brookings Institution analysis of early cannabis criminalization. https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/brief-history-us-marijuana-laws-180967762/ (smithsonianmag.com in Bing)

Source: Brookings Institution analysis https://www.brookings.edu/articles/the-racist-origins-of-marijuana-prohibition/ (brookings.edu in Bing)

3. Zero science, maximum hysteria

Instead of research, they relied on headlines like

  • “Marijuana: Assassin of Youth”
  • “The Weed With Roots in Hell” Source: Library of Congress newspaper archives.

Reefer Madness became the 1930s version of a viral Facebook panic post. Except instead of your aunt sharing it, it was the federal government. Source:Library of Congress newspaper archives https://www.loc.gov/item/2016655020/

Reefer Madness didn’t start in the South. But the South sure knew how to run with it.

1. Moral panic fit neatly into “family values” politics

The messaging aligned perfectly with long‑standing cultural fears about pleasure, rebellion, and anything that might loosen the grip of social control.

2. Racist narratives aligned with Jim Crow politics

The film’s messaging reinforced the same racist stereotypes used to justify segregation and policing. Source: ACLU report on racial disparities in cannabis arrests. https://www.aclu.org/report/tale-two-countries-racially-targeted-arrests-era-marijuana-reform (aclu.orgin Bing)

3. Churches amplified the message

Pastors preached that cannabis was a gateway to sin, jazz, and loose behavior. Which, ironically, made it sound more fun.

4. But let’s be clear. The whole country bought the lie.

From California to New York, lawmakers, newspapers, and civic groups all joined the panic parade. The South wasn’t alone. It was just louder, more dramatic, and more committed to the bit.

How Reefer Madness Still Shapes the Cannabis Industry Today

1. Criminalization that lasted generations

Decades of arrests of overwhelmingly targeting Black and brown communities created barriers that still affect who gets to participate in the legal industry. Source:ACLU racial disparity data. https://www.aclu.org/report/tale-two-countries-racially-targeted-arrests-era-marijuana-reform (aclu.org in Bing).

2. Stigma that refuses to die

Even now, people across the country acted like the church bulletin just burst into flames at the word “cannabis” like it’s a demon trying to get on the church roll. Source: Pew Research Center surveys on cannabis attitudes. https://www.pewresearch.org/short-reads/2024/03/26/americans-say-marijuana-should-be-legal/ (pewresearch.org in Bing).

3. Regulatory chaos

Because the plant was demonized instead of studied, the modern industry is still fighting inconsistent state laws, banking restrictions, and research barriers. Source: Congressional Research Service on cannabis policy https://crsreports.congress.gov/product/pdf/R/R44782 (crsreports.congress.gov in Bing)

Source: FDA on research limitations https://www.fda.gov/news-events/public-health-focus/fda-and-cannabis-research-and-drug-approval-process (fda.govin Bing).

4. Misinformation still shapes public opinion

People trust alcohol, a literal toxin, more than a plant with thousands of years of medicinal use. Source: CDC alcohol toxicity data; NIH cannabis research summaries. https://www.cdc.gov/alcohol/fact-sheets/alcohol-use.htm(cdc.gov in Bing)

Source: NIH cannabis research summaries https://nida.nih.gov/publications/research-reports/marijuana/what-are-marijuanas-effects (nida.nih.gov in Bing)

Despite the chaos, the cannabis industry is doing what Americans do best. It’s taking something messy, misinformed, historically wrong and turning it into something useful. We now have terpene education, standardized dosing, medical research, legalization movements, and a whole generation saying, “Wait. Y’all lied to us?” Reefer Madness may have started the conversation, but it sure as hell won’t end it.

So, here’s to the end of Reefer Madness thinking. May it finally be laid to rest next to corsets, bloodletting, and the belief that margarine is healthier than butter. And may the next time someone Southern, Northern, coastal, or corn‑fed tries to warn you about the “dangers” of cannabis, you smile sweetly and say “Honey, the only madness here is believing a 1936 propaganda film over actual science.”

“Reefer Madness didn’t just misinform America. It became the blueprint for 80 years of bad policy, demonizing religious communities, and political theater. The only thing it ever got right was the jazz.”

And let’s end with this, loud enough for the folks in the back who still think the smell of cannabis is going to send them straight to glory. The scent of burning cannabis will not make you instantly die. It won’t stop your heart. It won’t melt your morals. It won’t summon jazz musicians to corrupt your children. It won’t even give you a contact high unless you’re basically hotboxing inside a broom closet with Snoop Dogg.

We have survived Reefer Madness, the propaganda, survived the sermons, survived the politicians who swore a whiff of weed would turn the whole country into a jazz‑fueled apocalypse. We survived the lies. So now? You can survive the smoke. Or if the smell of a plant sends you into a full spiritual crisis, you are absolutely free to march around town in a gas mask like you’re training for the CDC Olympics. That’s between you, your lungs, and your HOA. But the rest of us? We’re done pretending the air is dangerous just because the truth finally burned hot enough to rise.

And let’s be honest. Nobody throws a fit over the smell of cigarette smoke. You can walk through a parking lot littered with butts, past a bar that smells like regret and menthols, and not one person starts a moral crusade. Alcohol? Legal, glorified, and sold next to the Lunchables despite being a literal toxin that’s wrecked more lives than cannabis ever could. But one whiff of weed and suddenly folks are acting like they’ve been personally attacked by a cloud. If you can survive the scent of stale beer and your uncle’s Marlboro breath, you can survive a terpene breeze without filing a complaint to the HOA.

Affirmation: I am stronger than propaganda and calmer than a 1936 panic attack.

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

#ThisPuzzledLife

If These Cats Don’t Stop Explaining Weed, I’m Calling Jesus

“If life hands you chaos, season it like cast‑iron and keep on cookin’.”

  -Tinkerbell, Chairwoman of Household Dignity and Selective Judgment

Light the charcoal. Sprinkle the sage. Negative energy go away. Lord knows if we don’t cleanse this house before we start talking, one of these cats is gonna summon something we can’t put back. Piper already knocked over a jar of buttons like she was opening a portal. Coco’s in the kitchen licking cornbread crumbs off the floor like she’s trying to divine the future. And Tinkerbell? She’s perched on the back of the recliner judging everybody like the church usher who knows your business. 

So yes, light the charcoal. Sprinkle the sage. Shoo the foolishness out the door. We’re about to discuss cannabis. And these Deep South cats have opinions they did not ask permission to have.

Piper struts in like she owns the deed to the house. Tail high. Eyes wide. And already judging.

“Why,” she begins, “do half these strains sound like folks we’re related to.” She’s not wrong.

Piper’s Official List of ‘That’s Somebody’s Cousin’ Strains

  • Bubba Kush– “Tell me that ain’t the man who fixed your alternator in 2009.”
  • Larry OG – “Larry still owes Mama twenty dollars.”
  • Billy Kimber – “He’s the one who got banned from the Piggly Wiggly.”
  • Runtz – “That’s the kid who used to steal Capri Suns at Vacation Bible School.”

Piper says cannabis naming committees are clearly run by “men named Scooter who wear camo to funerals.” She ends her segment by knocking over a Mason jar and calling it “cultural commentary.” 

Coco waddles in like she just finished a plate of cornbread and is ready to testify before Congress.

“Listen,” she says, licking crumbs off her chest, “if you name a strain after food, I will assume it’s a snack. That’s on y’all.”

Coco’s Deep South Review of Food Strains

  • Georgia Pie– “Where is the cobbler? Don’t play with me.”
  • Banana Pudding– “If it ain’t layered with Nilla wafers, it’s false advertising.”
  • Gumbo– “This one made me mad on principle.”
  • Watermelon Zkittlez-“This tastes like somebody lied.”

Coco proposes new, more honest Southern strain names such as:

  • “I’m Too High to Go to Walmart”
  • “Front Porch Philosophy Hour”
  • “Who Ate the Last Biscuit”
  • “I Swear I Heard a Ghost in the Hallway”

She ends her speech by stealing a Cheez-It and blaming it on “the humidity.”

Tinkerbell sits like a church lady who’s about to tell you she’s praying for you. But also judging your life.

“These names,” she says, “are for people who think they’re having a spiritual awakening but are actually just staring at the ceiling fan.”

Examples from the Church Bulletin of Weed

  • Northern Lights-“Ma’am, you are in Mississippi. The only lights you’re seeing are from the Dollar General sign.”
  • Skywalker OG – “You are not walking anywhere. Sit down.”
  • God’s Gift -“Bold. Very bold.”
  • Third Eye– “That’s not enlightenment. That’s dehydration.”

Tinkerbell recommends all spiritual strains come with a warning label that reads, “May cause you to think you’ve discovered the meaning of life when you’ve actually just been petting the same blanket for 45 minutes.” She concludes by reminding everyone that she is the only one in this house with dignity. Piper says, “Rename everything. Y’all lack imagination.” Coco says, “Snacks should be included with purchase.” Tinkerbell says, “Please stop embarrassing the household in front of the neighbors.”

And that, is all the wisdom these Mississippi cats have to offer today. And how my cats, three unlicensed, unqualified, deeply Southern creatures, have chosen to explain cannabis strain names. With judgment, crumbs, and the confidence of a possum in a Waffle House parking lot. And even that is hanging by a thread.

Piper’s already stomping off like she’s late for her shift at the Waffle House. Coco has entered her post‑snack coma. And cannot be reached for comment. Tinkerbell is staring out the window like she’s narrating a true‑crime documentary about the rest of us.

As we wrap this up, go on and light the charcoal one more time. Sweep the foolishness out the door. And thank the Lord above that cannabis doesn’t come with a family reunion attached. Because half of these strain names already sound like they’d show up uninvited. Asked for gas money. And leave with your Tupperware.

Until next time, may your weed be smooth. Your snacks be plentiful. And your cats mind their business for at least five consecutive minutes. Amen, Ashe, and y’all behave now. Thanks for reading! Keep blazin.’

Affirmation: I can handle whatever today throws at me. Even if it’s lopsided, underseasoned, or delivered by a cat with an attitude. I stay grounded, I stay Southern, and I stay unbothered.

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

#ThisPuzzledLife

The Great Depression‑Core Easter Egg Hunt of 2026

“If Jesus can roll away a stone. My cats can certainly chase one.”

-This Puzzled Life

Light the charcoal. Sprinkle the sage. Today’s blog is about the first annual, recession‑sponsored, driveway‑rock Easter egg hunt starring my three cats  Piper, Tinkerbell, and Coco. Each of whom has the confidence of a toddler in a Batman cape. And the budget of a 1930s dust‑bowl farmer.

And trust me, we need the charcoal and the sage. Today’s story requires spiritual reinforcement. Ancestral backup. And maybe a small loan from the universe. We are gathered here not just to celebrate Easter. But to honor a sacred family tradition known as the annual Easter egg hunt that gets cheaper. Stranger. And more geologically focused every single year.

Once upon a time, when eggs were merely expensive instead of mythical artifacts guarded by dragons, we used actual eggs. Then the economy said, “Let’s make this interesting.” And last year we were forced to paint tiny red potatoes like we were running a Depression‑era art camp for feral children. But this year? Oh, this year the economy said, “I’m about to humble you.” Eggs? Absolutely not. Potatoes? Out of budget. Plastic eggs? Only if we sell a kidney.

So now we’re out in the driveway gathering rocks like we’re preparing for a biblical stoning. But we’re making it festive. The cats are dressed like they’re starring in a low‑budget Easter musical directed entirely by chaos. They are ready. They are dramatic. They are overdressed for a driveway geology project.

Welcome to the First Annual Rock‑Based Easter Egg Hunt. Where the eggs are heavy. The cats are unhinged. And the budget is nonexistent. Let us begin.

THE GREAT ROCK HUNT OF 2026

(Because eggs are $47.99 a dozen and we are not the Rockefellers.)

Let me set the scene. Last year, when the economy was only medium terrible, we painted tiny red potatoes and pretended they were Easter eggs. This year? This year the economy said, “Hold my beer.” And now we’re out in the driveway collecting rocks like we’re building a medieval wall. And the cats are dressed like they’re attending the Met Gala of Poverty.

Piper is wearing a pastel pink tutu, a sparkly bowtie, and the expression of a woman who has been personally victimized by inflation. She keeps adjusting her tutu like she’s on a runway and the judges are harsh. She also insisted on wearing bunny ears that are three sizes too big. So now she looks like a malfunctioning satellite dish.

Tinkerbell showed up in a lavender cardigan, pearls, and a tiny fascinator hat like she’s the Queen of England attending a budget Easter parade. She is not here to play. She is here to supervise. She brought a clipboard. Where she got it? I do not know. Why she has it? I absolutely know. It’s to judge us.

Coco is wearing a neon yellow vest like she’s the foreman of a construction site. She has a whistle. She keeps blowing it. No one asked her to. She also has a tiny tool belt with absolutely nothing in it except a single Temptations treat she calls “emergency rations.”

I step outside with a basket of freshly washed driveway rocks. Because we are classy. Even in ruin. And announced, “Alright ladies, the Easter Rock Hunt is officially open.”

Piper: “The economy has failed us.” 

Tinkerbell: “Focus. We need strategy.” 

Coco: blows whistle aggressively “move out.”

They scatter like furry, unhinged Marines.

Piper immediately tries to pick up a rock twice her size and screams, “I found the golden egg!” Even though it is clearly just a chunk of gravel. Tinkerbell is inspecting each rock like she’s appraising diamonds at Sotheby’s.

Tinkerbell: “This one has good structure. Excellent weight. Very egg‑adjacent.” 

Me: “It’s literally a rock.” 

Tinkerbell: “And yet it speaks to me.”

Meanwhile, Coco is rolling rocks down the driveway like she’s testing them for aerodynamics.

Coco: “This one’s too round. This one’s too flat. This one’s a weapon.” 

Me: “We’re not arming you.” 

Coco: “Then why give me a vest.”

Piper tries to hide her rock under a bush. But forgets she’s wearing a tutu and gets stuck. Tinkerbell prints her name on every rock she finds claiming, “intellectual property.” And Coco attempts to stack her rocks into a pyramid. While declaring herself “Rock Pharaoh.” And demands tribute. I am standing there holding a basket of driveway debris wondering how my life became a Depression‑era children’s book.

After thirty minutes of chaos. Screaming. And Coco blowing that whistle like she’s summoning the spirits. The cats gather around their “egg” piles. Piper has one giant rock she refuses to let go of. Tinkerbell has curated a tasteful collection of smooth stones arranged by color gradient. Coco has built a rock fortress and is now guarding it like a dragon. I clap my hands and say, “Happy Easter, everyone!” Piper throws her arms up and yells, “We did it. We beat poverty.” And I replied, “No, baby. We absolutely did not. But we survived it with style.”

And that, my friends, is how my household celebrated Easter this year. Three cats in couture. Hunting driveway rocks like they were Fabergé eggs. And proving once again that joy has never, not once in the history of the South, depended on money. It has always depended on chaos, commitment, and a tutu that refuses to quit.

This is how Easter went down in this household with three cats dressed like they were attending a budget‑friendly Coachella. Hunting driveway rocks with the intensity of Olympic athletes. And the dignity of raccoons in formalwear.

Piper strutted around with her giant boulder like she had just won Miss Universe: Rock Division. Tinkerbell curated her stone collection like she was preparing for a Sotheby’s auction titled “Recession Chic: The Pebble Edition.” And Coco built a fortress so structurally sound that FEMA should probably take notes. Meanwhile, I stood there clutching a basket of gravel while realizing that this is my life now. I’m a woman who once dreamed of stability. But now I’m painting driveway rocks because the economy said, “Not today, sweetheart.’

But here’s the thing. We laughed. We played. We made magic out of minerals. Because joy isn’t about the price of eggs. It’s about the chaos you create with the creatures who love you. Even when you’re out here painting driveway debris like a broke Renaissance artist who got kicked out of art school for using “nontraditional mediums.”

So let the world crumble. Let the prices rise. Let the eggs remain unaffordable. We will be in the driveway wearing our finest thrift‑store couture. Hunting rocks like they’re treasure. And proving, once again, that resilience is just Southern stubbornness wearing a tutu. And that’s on Easter. Mic dropped. Rock rolled. Thanks for reading! Happy Easter!

Affirmation: I am resourceful, resilient, and fully capable of turning driveway rocks into holiday magic.

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

#ThisPuzzledLife

Cannabis Awareness Month: A Statement From the Feline Administration

“Before we begin, I’d like to remind everyone that I am the smartest creature in this house, and that includes the humans who keep losing their lighters.”

-Piper, Chief Chaos Strategist

Light the charcoal. Sprinkle the sage. Negative energy, evacuate the premises immediately. The Feline Administration is now in session. And Lord help whoever thought they could show up unprepared.

Piper, wearing her “I run this agency” bowtie. She steps onto the podium like she’s about to rewrite state law with a crayon. Coco is rustling through the official documents which is bold, considering she can’t read and also ate page three. Tinkerbell sits at the head of the table. Paws crossed. And radiating the kind of judgment that could shut down a whole committee hearing.

Today’s agenda is simple:

  • Educate the public.
  • Maintain order (Tinkerbell’s job, allegedly).
  • Steal snacks (Coco’s only contribution).
  • Cause chaos with confidence (Piper’s entire personality).

So, inhale peace. Exhale foolishness. And brace yourself. The Feline Administration has convened. They have statements, opinions, and absolutely no qualifications.

Camera clicks. Reporters whisper. Someone drops a pen. Coco eats it.

Piper clears her throat dramatically.

Piper struts up to the podium wearing a crooked green bowtie with the confidence of a cat who has never once been wrong in her life. She taps the mic.  “Is this thing on? Good. Ladies, gentlemen, and those who prefer to mind their business. Welcome to the first annual Cannabis Awareness Month Press Briefing. I will be taking no follow‑up questions unless they involve snacks or compliments. As the Chief Awareness Officer of this household, I would like to remind the public that cannabis education is important. For example, dosage matters. Hydration matters. And letting Coco near the edibles does not matter. Because she will eat the packaging instead.”

Behind her, Coco is already rummaging through the press corps’ bags like TSA with no supervision. Tinkerbell sits on a high stool. Paws crossed. And looking like she’s about to veto the entire event.

Coco nods proudly with a granola bar wrapper stuck to her face. And waddles up dragging a bag of snacks she absolutely stole.

Coco: “Thank you. My platform is simple. If you’re going to elevate your mind. You better elevate your snack game. That’s all. No questions.”

She leaves the podium to go investigate a reporter’s purse.

Tinkerbell glides up like a Supreme Court Justice who has had enough.

Tinkerbell: “Let me be clear. Cannabis Awareness Month is about responsibility, education, and not acting like whatever Piper is doing right now.”

Piper is, in fact, chewing on the mic cord.

Tinkerbell: “Know your limits. Know your laws. Know that if you start reorganizing the pantry at 2 AM, that’s on you, not the plant.”

She steps down with the dignity of a queen who has spoken truth.

Piper hops back up, tail high. She leaps back onto the podium, one paw raised like she’s blessing the congregation and threatening them at the same time.

Piper: “Let this be known. Cannabis Awareness Month has been officially observed. Audited. And improved by the Feline Administration. Stay educated. Stay responsible. And for the love of whiskers, stop acting surprised when Coco steals your snacks. That’s on you. If humans spent half as much time learning about cannabis as they do losing their keys, the world would be a calmer place.” 

Piper smirks, leans into the mic, and delivers the final line, “Class dismissed. Y’all be safe out there.” 

Piper drops the mic. Coco eats the mic and burps. Tinkerbell flicks her tail. Which signals the end of the session and  leaves the room. Press conference adjourned.

Affirmation: “I stay grounded, educated, and unbothered. Even when the cats running this press conference clearly are not. I honor my peace, respect the plant, and trust myself to navigate chaos with humor, clarity, and snacks.”

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

#ThisPuzzledLife

The Day My Cats Tried to Save Democracy 

“If my cats can overthrow the monarchy before breakfast, I can certainly survive one more day of America acting like it’s run by people who failed the group project of life.”

-This Puzzled Life

Light the charcoal. Apparently my cats have decided that today is the day they overthrow monarchy, tyranny, and anyone who tries to tell them the treat bag is “empty.” The sun isn’t even up yet. Piper’s already in her frog costume. Coco’s packing snacks like she’s fleeing a collapsing empire. And Tinkerbell is proofreading protest signs with the judgment of a retired Supreme Court justice who’s seen too much. If you hear chanting, don’t worry that’s just my household preparing for the next No Kings protest. Which according to Piper, is “mandatory for all mammals with a functioning spine.” Nothing says “grassroots uprising” like a grill going before sunrise. And three cats stretching like they’re about to reenact the Boston Tea Party with Meow Mix.

Piper showed up in her Portland Frog Costume. Because nothing intimidates tyrants like an amphibious icon with a gas problem. She hopped onto the cooler like it was a podium and declared, “NO KINGS IN AMERICA! ALSO, WHO TOOK MY STRING?” Her sign was bigger than she is. Her confidence was bigger than Mississippi humidity. She crop-dusted the entire left flank of the protest within minutes. Which honestly dispersed the crowd faster than any riot police ever could. A legend.

Coco marched with the energy of a cat who believes deeply in democracy. But more deeply in the possibility of someone dropping a chicken tender. Her sign read, “I Am Antifa (And Also Hungry).” She wasn’t sure what ANTIFA meant, but she was 100% certain it involved snacks and possibly knocking over a fascist’s drink. At one point she tried to unionize the protestors into a collective bargaining unit for “More Breaks. More Snacks. Less Nonsense.” Honestly, she had a point.

Tinkerbell arrived last. She was wearing the expression of a cat who has seen too much. Knows too much. And is tired of everyone else’s foolishness. Her sign was simple and elegant. “RELEASE THE EPSTEIN FILES!” She held it like she was presenting evidence to the Supreme Court. Every time someone asked her a question, she blinked slowly like, “Sweetheart, I was radical before you were born.” She also confiscated Coco’s third snack bag “for misuse of resources.” Which caused a minor internal revolt. She quelled it with one hiss. A queen ironically at a No Kings protest.

The cats strutted down the street like a furry constitutional crisis. Piper led chants that sounded like “Reeeeow No Kings.” Coco kept trying to start a drum circle using two empty Fancy Feast cans. And Tinkerbell corrected everyone’s grammar on their signs At one point, Piper climbed a mailbox and declared it “The People’s Mailbox,” which is now apparently a sovereign nation. Coco tried to annex it. Tinkerbell vetoed the annexation. Democracy was in action.

As the sun set, the cats gathered on the hood of my vehicle like they were about to drop the hottest protest mixtape of 2026. Piper croaked (frog costume still on): “We Will Return!” Coco added, “With Snacks!” And Tinkerbell concluded, “And Better Signage.” And just like that, they dispersed into the night.  Three revolutionaries leaving behind pawprints, chaos, and the faint smell of grilled chicken.

Now, according to neighborhood gossip. And one extremely dramatic Facebook post from Brenda‑with‑the‑Bible‑Verse‑Profile‑Picture. The “red hat crowd” was supposed to show up and “defend traditional values” at the No Kings protest. They did not show up. Not a single one. Not a hat. Not a slogan. Not even a rogue uncle wandering around confused because he clicked the wrong event on Facebook.

Piper kept scanning the horizon like she was waiting for a final boss battle. Coco had snacks ready for the confrontation. Tinkerbell had a whole speech prepared titled “Sit Down, Sweetheart. You’re Embarrassing Yourself.”

But the red hats? Silent. Invisible. Absent like a dad in a country song. Turns out it’s real easy to talk tough on the internet and real hard to argue with a frog‑costumed cat holding a sign that says “NO KINGS. NO TYRANTS. NO LITTERBOX MONARCHY.”

While the red hats were busy not attending, the Pride crowd rolled in like a glitter‑powered cavalry. The drag queens arrived first. Heels clicking. Wigs defying gravity. Storybooks in hand like they were about to read “Goodnight Moon” and dismantle generational prejudice in one sitting. One queen read a children’s book about kindness so sweet it could’ve cured diabetes. A conservative Christian woman gasped like she’d just witnessed a felony. Piper whispered, “You can’t catch gay from a storybook, Brenda.” and honestly, she wasn’t wrong.

Then came the trans community glowing, gorgeous, and radiating the kind of authenticity that makes insecure people break out in hives. Tinkerbell watched them walk by and said, “Now that is commitment to the bit.” Coco tried to follow them because she thought they had snacks. She was wrong. But they still gave her a hug. A small cluster of conservative Christians stood off to the side holding signs like, “Think of the children!”, “God hates glitter!”, and “Traditional families only!”

Meanwhile, the actual children were on the drag queen float screaming “SLAYYYYYY” and asking for stickers. One man muttered, “This is indoctrination.” Sir your church has a puppet ministry. Relax. A drag queen sprinkled him with holy glitter and said, “Go in peace, my child. And maybe go to therapy.” Tinkerbell nodded approvingly.

Somewhere between Piper declaring the mailbox a sovereign nation. And Tinkerbell threatening to cite a conservative Christian for “excessive pearl‑clutching.” I had to step back and spark up. Not for recreation. This was medicinal survival. A harm‑reduction strategy for the soul. There is nothing that counteracts the stupidity and hypocrisy of the world like a smooth inhale and the realization that drag queens reading storybooks are somehow “dangerous.” Trans folks living their truth are “controversial.” And grown adults in red hats are terrified of glitter. But not, apparently, of their own search histories.

I lit that joint like it was sage. I smoked it like I was cleansing the air of nonsense. I exhaled like I was releasing every Facebook argument Brenda has ever typed in all caps. Meanwhile, my cats watched me like I was performing a sacred ritual. Piper nodded solemnly as if to say, “Good. You’ll need that.” Coco asked if weed came in cat snack form. It does not. She was devastated. Tinkerbell simply blinked the way elders do when they’ve seen this cycle of foolishness repeat since the dawn of time.

And honestly? The weed helped. It softened the edges of the hypocrisy. Made the contradictions easier to laugh at. And reminded me that queer joy, trans authenticity, drag queen brilliance, and cat‑led rebellion is its own form of protest. Sometimes you don’t smoke to escape the world. Sometimes you smoke to stay in it without losing your mind. And on that day? The world was lucky I had a lighter. And I smoked it so reality would stop acting like it was raised by wolves and homeschooled by social media.

And that’s how my cats almost started a revolution before lunchtime. Piper’s tutu is crooked.Coco’s pockets are full of contraband chicken nuggets. And Tinkerbell is filing a formal complaint against “everyone born after 2010.” The protest signs are crooked. The chants are off-key. And the mailbox is now a sovereign nation with Piper as its self-appointed amphibious president. And my cats are still convinced they personally saved America from monarchy.

That’s the moment my household realized the revolution doesn’t need permission slips, red hats, or anyone clutching pearls so hard they leave dents. It just needs a frog‑costumed chaos. A snack‑drunk anarchist. And a dignified elder cat who can silence a whole crowd with one blink.

While the red hats stayed home polishing their Facebook arguments, the drag queens read storybooks. The trans folks showed up in full radiant truth. And the queer community brought enough joy to power the grid. Meanwhile, the conservative Christians tried to pray the glitter away. But honey glitter is eternal. My cats marched anyway. My household stood anyway.  And if that bothers anybody? Well,  that sounds like a you problem, sweetheart. Thanks for reading! And All Power To The People!

Affirmation: “I honor my peace, protect my joy, and let my cats lead the revolution while I stay hydrated, medicated, and unbothered by fools.”

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

#ThisPuzzledLife