When you find whatever is meant for you...in career, in relationship, in life...you know it. You feel it. Don't stop until it feels right. Also, it doesn't have to feel right to anyone but you. Others may not understand but, you will.

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@lillyphool
When you find whatever is meant for you...in career, in relationship, in life...you know it. You feel it. Don't stop until it feels right. Also, it doesn't have to feel right to anyone but you. Others may not understand but, you will.

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The narrative around people-pleasing is missing a crucial point: it isnât a victimless crime. We always talk about how "not knowing how to say no" ruins your own peace, but we rarely address how deeply it frustrates and disrespects the people around you. It isnât just shyness or a personality quirkâit is a lapse in accountability. When you accept a job, a favor, or an emotional commitment that you cannot actually fulfill, you arenât being "nice." You are being unreliable. Whether itâs a physical presence or emotional labor, if you arenât in it 100%, you are simply taking up space that could have been filled by someone with the actual capacity to be there.
âThere is a specific, draining exhaustion that comes from working with someone who is only there because they felt too guilty to decline. You end up carrying their weight and their resentment simultaneously. A "no" is actually a gift of clarity; it allows for a better plan and respects everyoneâs time. We need to stop framing the inability to say no as a form of kindness. In reality, itâs a breach of integrity. I would much rather deal with the temporary sting of a "no" than the long-term drag of a half-hearted "yes."
âWhat actually happens when you say no? Nothing. The world doesn't end. In fact, most people would be delighted to work or be with someone who is genuinely "all in" rather than someone who is just there because they lacked the spine to set a boundary. Give the people around you the courtesy of the truth so they can find someone who actually wants to be in the room.
Iâve officially reached my limit with the "lowest common denominator" of the internet. I believe social media access should be a privilege, not a universal right. Just as we have a legal age for consent or voting, there should be a "qualification" for using these platformsâone based on EQ, IQ, and basic human decency rather than just reaching a certain age.
âIt might sound snobbish, but the sheer volume of low-intellect, low-empathy behavior online is physically exhausting. Itâs exactly why I stopped using Facebook and Instagram. It literally "burns my eyes" to scroll through feeds of lifeless people who exist only for performative validation.
âThink about cyberbullyingâwho do you think is behind that? Itâs almost always people with no productivity and no purpose, hiding behind screens to comment on lives they don't understand. These platforms have given a megaphone to the uneducated, allowing them to believe theyâre smart simply because theyâve found an echo chamber of other illiterates to back them up.
âIâm done letting my mental space be taxed by people who don't even have the self-awareness to realize they're just noise. If youâre going to have a voice that reaches millions, you should have to prove youâre eligible to use it.
I always find this kind of side of corners pretty. I feel like if you look closely, you can find beauty in everything.
âWhat I want now is not happiness but awareness. One thinks one has cut oneself off from the world, but it is enough to see an olive tree upright in the golden dust, or beaches glistening in the morning sun, to feel this separation melt away. Thus with me. I become aware of the possibilities for which I am responsible. Every minute of life carries with it its miraculous value, and its face of eternal youth.â
â Albert Camus, Notebooks, 1935-1942

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Everything is Politicalâeven Love
I believe love isnât separate from politics. If someone says they âloveâ me but expects me to shrink my dreams or stay home while they provide, thatâs not just personalâitâs patriarchal.
The whole âIâll work, you just stay at home and be comfortableâ narrative sounds caring, but itâs also control. Comfort can be a cage. When women are kept dependent, we lose freedom, we lose voice, and society loses resistance.
Making women âcomfortableâ at home isnât just personalâitâs political. It removes us from public life, from the workforce, from decision-making. And when half the population is silent, governments and systems can rule unchecked. Itâs easier to manipulate people when women are told their place is only in the home.
This doesnât mean women shouldnât choose domestic life. But it has to be a choice, not a romanticized trap. Feminine âcomfortâ shouldnât mean giving up ambition or power.
At the end of the day, love, work, familyânone of it exists outside patriarchy or capitalism. The personal is political, always.
I hate when pretty girls on my social media accounts act all sad. Why are you sad, darling? Youâre so pretty. You canât be sad over some dudeâthatâs not your purpose. Youâre heavenly pretty, and youâre crying over a man? Seriously? Donât post those sad songs on your notes; it doesnât suit you. Youâre an angel. Angels donât cry over some random man.
Life can be hard and cruel to pretty girls too, but crying over a man? Darling, youâre way too pretty for that. I can treat you better than those assholes. You deserve better, girlies.
When we let go of the need to be perfect, we free ourselves to live fully, embracing the mess, complexity, and richness of a life that's delightfully real.