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Tuesday, March 24, 2026

Chemistry Can’t Fix Character

Butterflies have probably destroyed more futures than boredom ever did.

We’ve been sold this idea that chemistry is some divine green light. If it’s intense, if it’s electric, if you feel it in your stomach and your knees go a little weak, it must mean something. It must be fate. It must be right.

It’s not fate. It’s biology.

Chemistry is powerful, but it’s also cheap. It can be triggered by familiarity, by attachment wounds, by unpredictability, by someone being just unavailable enough to keep you leaning forward. Your nervous system can light up for all kinds of reasons, and not all of them are healthy. A spark doesn’t mean safe. It doesn’t mean stable. It doesn’t mean sustainable.

Character is quieter.

Character is how someone treats the waitstaff when the order is wrong. It’s how they speak about people who can’t offer them anything. It’s whether their words match their actions when no one’s clapping. It’s consistency. It’s accountability. It’s whether they can regulate themselves when they’re frustrated instead of punishing everyone in the room.

Chemistry is how they look at you across a table.

One builds a future. The other is a good time for the weekend.

We tend to prioritize the feeling over the foundation. We’ll overlook small red flags because the connection feels rare. We’ll rationalize disrespect because the conversations are “so deep.” We’ll ignore inconsistency because when it’s good, it’s really good.

But intensity isn’t intimacy. And attraction isn’t alignment.

The truth is, chemistry can coexist with chaos. You can feel wildly drawn to someone who lacks integrity. You can have fireworks with someone who has no follow-through. You can want someone deeply who doesn’t have the character to love you well.

And here’s the part no one likes to admit: choosing based on spark alone is still a choice.

If you keep picking potential over patterns, don’t be surprised when the story ends the same way. If you keep mistaking adrenaline for compatibility, don’t be shocked when it burns out. Sparks are exciting, but they don’t keep you warm for long.

Character does.

Character is steady. It’s sometimes less cinematic. It might even feel a little boring at first if you’re used to emotional rollercoasters. But boring is underrated. Boring is safe. Boring is someone who shows up when they say they will. Someone who doesn’t disappear when things get inconvenient. Someone who can have a hard conversation without turning it into a war.

Butterflies are a feeling. Character is a decision made over and over again.

One flutters. One builds.

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. 

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