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Tuesday, March 17, 2026

Marriage Is Not a Fairytale

Let’s retire the fantasy.

Marriage isn’t a glittering movie montage set to a love song. It’s not soft lighting, slow dances in the kitchen, or a permanent state of butterflies. That stuff is great — enjoy it — but it’s not the structure holding the house up. Marriage is a contract with emotions attached. And contracts, unlike crushes, are built to withstand fluctuation.

Romance gets the headlines. Discipline sustains the union.

That’s the part no one puts on a greeting card. The daily choice to stay respectful when you’re irritated. The decision to communicate when you’d rather withdraw. The commitment to keep your word when your mood shifts. Love may spark the fire, but discipline keeps the heat steady when the weather changes.

Too many people choose a spouse based on who makes them happiest in a moment. That’s a fragile metric. Happiness fluctuates. Jobs change. Health changes. Stress shows up uninvited. If your foundation is built on how someone makes you feel on your best days, what happens on the hard ones?

A wiser question is this: Who aligns with your values when happiness fluctuates?

When money is tight, do they panic or plan? When conflict arises, do they escalate or engage? When life presses in, do they blame or build? Attraction matters. Chemistry matters. But alignment — that’s the long game. Shared values create predictability. Predictability builds trust. Trust creates safety. And safety is far more durable than excitement.

Feelings fluctuate. Character rarely does.

That’s why character has to outrank charisma. Patience over passion. Integrity over intensity. Emotional steadiness over emotional thrill. The person you marry will eventually reveal who they are under pressure. The question is whether you paid attention before signing the contract.

Marriage isn’t about finding someone who keeps you constantly happy. It’s about choosing someone whose principles you respect when the happy fades in and out — because it will. The fairytale sells you permanence of feeling. Reality requires permanence of commitment.

"Don't go chasing waterfalls." Choose accordingly.

Tuesday, March 10, 2026

Closure Is Overrated in Breakups

We’ve all heard it — “I just need closure.” It sounds evolved. Grounded. Emotionally intelligent. But if we’re being honest, most of the time closure isn’t about healing. It’s about control.

It’s the quiet hope that if we can just get one more conversation, one more explanation, one more perfectly worded apology, the ending will feel different. Cleaner. Fairer. Less humiliating. We tell ourselves we want understanding, but what we really want is to edit the last chapter. We want to adjust the tone. Add context. Maybe even sneak in a plot twist where they suddenly realize our value.

Life doesn’t work like that.

Not every relationship gets a final speech. Not every breakup ends with mutual insight and cinematic clarity. Sometimes the lesson is the ending. Sometimes the way someone walks away is the explanation.

We struggle with that because incomplete narratives make us uncomfortable. Our brains crave resolution. We want the missing piece. The why. But good decision-making — the kind that actually leads to peace — requires tolerating ambiguity. It requires accepting that you may never fully understand someone else’s motives, and that you don’t actually need to.

You don’t need a beautifully structured apology to move forward. You don’t need them to admit they were wrong. You don’t need them to validate your version of events. What you need is acceptance — not of what they did, but of what is.

There’s a difference.

Chasing closure often means staying emotionally attached to someone who already showed you their character. We ignore what was demonstrated and obsess over what might be explained. But explanations don’t override behavior. If someone left carelessly, that carelessness is the closure. If they avoided hard conversations, that avoidance is the answer. If they chose convenience over commitment, believe the choice.

Here’s the part no one likes to admit: sometimes we seek closure because we want reassurance that we mattered. We want proof the relationship was real. But your worth was never dependent on their final text message. 

Peace doesn’t arrive in a perfectly crafted paragraph from them. It arrives in a decision from you.

The final decision to stop rereading old messages.
The final decision to stop rehearsing imaginary conversations.
The final decision to accept that not every story gets tied up neatly (see "The Sopranos").

Closure isn’t something they give you. It’s something you practice.

Most of the time, it looks less like a conversation — and more like moving on without one.

Then of course, some of you claim to want closure because you want one more argument.  LOL! That's a blog post for another day. 

Tuesday, March 3, 2026

You Can’t Appraise Attachment

Somewhere along the way, we started confusing value with price.

Not the same thing. Not even close.

My dad has lived in the same house for 60 years. Sixty. That’s not an address. That’s a timeline. That’s where birthdays happened, where arguments cooled off on the front porch, where neighbors became family, where muscle memory can still find the light switch in the dark.

Now the city wants the land to build a park. On paper, it sounds wholesome. Trees. Benches. Joggers pretending they like jogging.

They’re offering him a settlement that’s supposedly “more than market value.” Translation: the spreadsheet says he should be grateful. The spreadsheet has never watched its sons grow up in that living room.

This is the part that fascinates me. Some of the people involved in the process genuinely seem to believe that if the number is high enough, the attachment disappears. Now don't get me wrong. There are some people on the city's acquisition team who truly care and sympathize for those in the neighborhood. They are just doing their jobs. 

But others I've heard seem to think that if I write you a check that you should just happily accept it and move on. And it's not because they are cold-hearted or anything. I'm not getting that vibe. It's because to those few, money solves all problems. Everything has a price.

“He’s getting more than it’s worth.”

According to who? Zillow? A city assessor with a clipboard? "Fairmarket value measures square footage. It doesn’t measure memories. That house is the last piece of my late mom that my dad has. And what's "fair" about forcing someone out for a pickleball court to be built where their kitchen once stood?

You can appraise a roof. You cannot appraise 60 years of the lives under it.

And this isn’t just about property. It’s about how we’ve trained ourselves to think in dollar signs in any situation.

I saw a recent Facebook post where a woman named Ayisha Diaz said a man has to provide her an allowance of around $50,000/monthly to date her. Not figuratively. Literally. A financial minimum requirement to qualify for romance.

So now love has a net worth threshold?

Don't get me wrong. If attractiveness was a superpower, then Ayisha would be an Avenger. But it's absolutely ridiculous and immature to make that kind of statement. A man who is willing to lease-to-own a woman will most likely dump her as soon as next year's model comes out.

Somewhere between hustle culture and luxury Instagram aesthetics, we started attaching monetary figures to human worth. If he doesn’t make X, he’s not serious. If she doesn’t have Y lifestyle, she’s settling. If your house is worth more, your loss hurts less. That’s lazy math.

Money is a tool. A powerful one. It buys comfort, security, options. Nobody sane is pretending it doesn’t matter. But it has become the laziest shortcut for measuring importance.

If you love someone, you’ll spend on them.
If you value your home, you’ll take the highest bid.
If you respect yourself, demand a millionaire.

It’s all the same logic. And it misses the point every time.

The reason my dad’s house can’t be reduced to a number is the same reason a relationship shouldn’t be reduced to a balance sheet. Attachment is not transactional. It’s accumulated. Slowly. Quietly. Over time.

There’s a difference between compensation and equivalence. You can compensate someone financially. You cannot make them whole emotionally. It means sometimes the “fair offer” still feels unfair. 

We like numbers because they’re clean. Emotions are messy. Bureaucracies love clean. Humans live in messy.

The irony is, parks are built to create memories. To give families a place to gather. To add quality of life. And in order to build those memories, someone else has to give up theirs.

I’m not arguing cities shouldn’t develop. Or that money doesn’t matter. I’m saying we should stop pretending money solves everything. A higher number does not automatically equal justice. Or closure. Or peace. You can value something deeply without being able to quantify it.

That used to be common sense.

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