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Tuesday, April 14, 2026

Stop Asking for Advice You Plan to Ignore: The Accountability Crisis Nobody Wants to Fix

People love advice. They just hate using it.

Everybody wants to vent. Everybody wants support. But the moment you try to offer something useful, suddenly you’re “judging,” “hating,” or “not understanding their situation.” Funny how that works. You asked for help, but what you really wanted was an audience.

I’ve got people in my life like this. Good people, but stuck on repeat. Same problems. Same complaints. Different day. It’s like watching a rerun nobody asked for. You already know the plot, the ending, and the excuse they’re going to use when nothing changes.

And let’s be honest. At some point, it’s not bad luck. It’s bad habits.


You can’t keep dating the same type of person and act surprised when it ends the same way. You can’t ignore opportunities to grow and then complain about being stuck. You can’t surround yourself with chaos and expect peace to magically show up like an Amazon Prime delivery.

Growth requires discomfort. Accountability requires honesty. And both of those seem to scare people more than the problems they claim to hate.

Here’s the part nobody wants to admit, and I've discussed this in the past: Some people don’t actually want solutions. They want validation. They want someone to say, “You’re right, it’s not your fault,” even when it clearly is. Because accepting responsibility means you have to change. And change means work. 

And work? That’s where the enthusiasm mysteriously disappears.

So, what do you do as a friend?

First, understand this: you can’t fix someone who is committed to staying broken. That’s not your failure. That’s their decision.

Second, stop overextending yourself. Listening to the same complaints over and over without action isn’t support. It’s emotional babysitting. And unless you’re getting paid for that, it gets old fast.

Third, set boundaries. You can care about someone without carrying their problems like a second job. Offer advice once. Maybe twice. After that, you’re just repeating yourself to someone who already decided not to listen.

And finally, protect your patience. Because nothing drains you faster than trying to pour into people who refuse to hold anything.

Helping someone only works when they’re willing to help themselves. Until then, all you’re doing is talking to a wall with feelings. And walls don’t change.

Tuesday, April 7, 2026

Mad Max IRL

Disclaimer: This one might offend a few people. That usually means it hit something real.

Something feels off in America right now. Even more than usual. Not broken overnight. Just slowly slipping. Like everything still looks normal… but it doesn’t feel normal anymore.

Welcome to Mad Max IRL (in real life).

No, we’re not fighting over gasoline in the desert… yet. But basic necessities are starting to feel like luxuries. Food prices keep rising. Rent is out of control. Owning a home sounds like a story from another era. 

In fact, owning anything sounds like a thing from the past. Movies went from tapes/DVDs to streaming. Music went from tapes/CDs to streaming. Do you physically own anything anymore or does it require a subscription to access it?

And energy? Gas, electricity, water… the essentials of life are getting harder to afford for everyday people.

We’re told this is all part of “progress.”

Progress for who? What larger plan is in play?

Because from where most people stand, progress looks like more building, more consuming, more war, and more strain on a planet that’s already showing signs of wear. Hotter summers. Stronger storms. Less balance. But hey, at least there’s another luxury development going up.

Meanwhile, politicians are busy performing. Arguing, debating, choosing sides. Not solving problems. Just keeping their supporters emotionally charged.

And we fall for it. Have been since before I was born.

We defend them. Fight for them. Stay loyal to them. While they benefit from the chaos, raise money off our outrage, and stay comfortably in power.

It’s not dysfunction. It’s strategy. Keep people acting stupid, and they won’t notice what’s actually happening.

And what’s happening is simple: the middle class is disappearing. Not overnight, but steadily. Quietly. Until one day you realize you’re closer to struggling than you are to stability.

That’s when things change.

Because when basic needs become unaffordable, people don’t just sit quietly. They adapt. They do what they have to do. History proves that.

So the idea of people eventually stealing gas or water? That’s not crazy. That’s predictable.

The real issue is we see the signs, but we ignore them. It’s easier to argue online than to question the system. Easier to pick a side than to admit the direction might be wrong. 

So we keep scrolling. Keep debating. Keep choosing teams.

While life slowly shifts from comfort… to survival.

Not all at once.

Just gradually enough for us to pretend everything is still fine.



Tuesday, March 31, 2026

Stop Making Decisions From Ego

There’s a bill that shows up long after the argument ends. Long after the door slams.

It’s the cost of ego.

Ego is expensive. Not in theory, but in real life. It ruins friendships over pride. It destroys marriages over stubbornness. It ends partnerships over who gets credit (see Jimmy Johnson and Jerry Jones if you're a Dallas Cowboys fan). 

And the wild part? Most of the damage starts over something small—who was right, who said it first, who gets acknowledged.

We tell ourselves it’s about principles. About standards. About respect. But if we’re honest, a lot of the time it’s about winning. And winning is overrated when it costs you what actually matters.

The ability to pause and ask, “What outcome do I actually want here?” Because if your need to be right outweighs your desire to be effective, you’re not winning—you’re posturing. You’re protecting your image instead of protecting the relationship, the mission, or the long-term result.

Ego loves the short-term victory. Humility plays the long game.

Ego says, “Don’t let that slide.”
Humility says, “Is this worth the friction?”

Ego says, “They need to know I was right.”
Humility says, “We need to move forward.”

The strongest leaders I’ve seen aren’t obsessed with credit. They’re obsessed with progress. They care more about solving the problem than being the hero who solved it. That mindset changes rooms. It lowers defenses. It invites collaboration instead of competition.

Sometimes maturity sounds like, “You’re right.” Even when it bruises you. Even when a part of you wants to add a footnote. Even when you could technically argue your side and maybe even win.

Because the goal isn’t to win the moment. It’s to win the outcome.

Ego will convince you that conceding makes you smaller. In reality, it makes you trusted. It makes you safe to work with. It makes you someone people don’t have to brace themselves around.

And that’s invaluable.

The truth is, most of us don’t lose opportunities because we lack intelligence. We lose them because we lack restraint. Because we couldn’t let something go. Because we had to make a point. Because we needed acknowledgment more than we needed alignment.

If you want better decisions, start with a better question: Am I trying to be effective, or am I trying to be right?


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