Thursday, May 28, 2026

From Chaos to Clean Air: Reclaiming Peace After a Turbulent Chapter

 

For several years I was part of a relationship that started with an almost magical sense of connection and slowly unraveled into something far more turbulent. Looking back, many of the patterns I lived through closely resembled traits often linked to borderline personality dynamics—especially the intense idealization at the start, followed by sudden shifts into devaluation, emotional push-pull, passive-aggression, and an exhausting cycle of closeness followed by withdrawal.

In the early days, it felt truly special. She expressed deep gratitude and affection, often telling me I was her rock and thanking me for the steady emotional support I provided. That warmth and idealization created a powerful bond, the kind that makes you believe you've found something rare and lasting. For a while, the relationship brought real joy and a feeling of being deeply valued.

Over time, however, the dynamic began to shift. Small triggers led to irritation and complaints. Passive-aggressive remarks became more common. What once felt like effortless connection started to feel unpredictable. Moments of warmth would give way to sudden distance, as if closeness itself had become threatening. Feedback or attempts to address recurring issues were often met with defensiveness, leaving me constantly trying to navigate shifting moods while keeping things stable. The back-and-forth—drawing me in, then pulling away—created a draining emotional roller-coaster. It was a classic trauma bond, where the highs kept me hoping and the lows left me walking on eggshells.

The end came suddenly. One evening she simply left the house, and within two weeks movers had taken her things. From that point on, communication largely stopped.

You’re Not Living — You’re Just Programmed

In this 20-minute philosophical reflection from Philosophical Vision, the narrator channels Nietzschean ideas to expose modern life as a carefully engineered illusion of freedom. You wake up, work, consume, and repeat, believing your ambitions and desires are your own—yet they’re largely the product of cultural conditioning, media, education, and dopamine-driven distractions designed to keep you compliant and distracted. Drawing on thinkers like Schopenhauer and Huxley, it argues that true freedom isn’t endless choice or pleasure, but the courage to strip away inherited beliefs, question the invisible “prison” of normalcy, and begin creating your own values amid the vertigo of self-discovery. A stark reminder that awakening starts with recognizing you’ve been running someone else’s script.

Glenn Greenwald Takes on 20 Trump Fans: War Hawk or Peacemaker?

In this Jubilee "Surrounded" episode, journalist Glenn Greenwald debates 20 Trump supporters on the president's foreign policy record. Greenwald argues Trump has been more of a war-making than peace-making leader—citing escalated bombings in Yemen, conflicts with Iran, and strong ties to the Israel lobby—while supporters defend Trump's actions as necessary for security, trade routes, and preventing bigger threats, highlighting deals, prevented escalations, and an "America First" stance. The lively exchanges cover corruption comparisons, bombing Iran, and whether Trump's approach truly prioritizes U.S. interests.

Hormuz Shutdown: $1.2 Trillion in Wealth Quietly Drifting East Every Day

In this detailed breakdown from Money & Empires, the video examines the devastating economic fallout from the Strait of Hormuz closure in late February 2026 amid US-Israel-Iran conflict. It highlights how this narrow chokepoint—handling ~20% of global oil and significant LNG—has frozen exports, triggered force majeure declarations, spiked oil prices past $120/barrel, and hammered Asian importers like South Korea and Japan, while Russia and especially China (with massive pre-built reserves) gain strategic advantages. The analysis argues that prolonged disruption is accelerating a permanent eastward migration of wealth, trade influence, and energy power, exposing Western vulnerabilities and reshaping global geopolitics in real time.

Candace Owens - It’s a Big Club And You Ain’t In It

In this Candace Owens clip, she connects disturbing dots around Charlie Kirk’s assassination: Netanyahu’s unusual podcast PR blitz in the weeks leading up to it, Charlie being the only major podcaster who turned him down after growing skeptical of Israel’s influence, and strange VIP military flights tied to Fort Huachuca. Candace weaves in Netanyahu’s long bromance with Mitt Romney from their Boston Consulting Group days, Egyptian planes shuttling possible Israeli VIPs during crises, and hints at larger projects involving Gaza displacement — painting a picture of elite networks, pressure, and consequences for those who step outside “the club.”

The Drift - Losing a 30-Year Friend to the Conspiracy Rabbit Hole (Satire)

 

In this satirical post, tech veteran Joshua Stylman reflects on watching a close friend of nearly three decades—once a sharp, curious, and empathetic thinker—drift into full-blown conspiracy thinking after the pandemic. What began with skepticism toward public health guidance escalated into distrust of all institutions, “doing his own research,” homeschooling his kids, rejecting vaccines, stockpiling gold, and seeing false flags everywhere. Stylman describes the painful encounter at a recent party, the emotional toll on family and friendships, and his sadness over the friend he’s effectively lost, while grappling with whether the radicalization stems from algorithms, personal pain, or something deeper—and whether there’s any path back.

Read the full post HERE.

US Bombs Iran During "Peace Talks" – Fueling War & Economic Chaos?

In this latest update from The New Atlas, Brian Berletic breaks down how the US continues airstrikes on Iran even amid reported ceasefires and diplomatic talks under President Trump. He argues that Western media spin portrays these negotiations as efforts to end conflict, but in reality, the US is using "diplomacy" as a tool to weaken Iran, maintain regional instability, disrupt energy exports to China and Asia, and prevent a full economic collapse while increasing dependence on US energy—mirroring long-standing strategies seen in policy papers like RAND's "Extending Russia" and Brookings' "Which Path to Persia." Berletic emphasizes this is part of a broader geopolitical game to manage tensions just below the threshold of all-out war.

Trump’s Polls Crash

In this episode of The Kim Iversen Show, Kim questions the narrative around Donald Trump's perfect 100% endorsement success rate in recent Republican primaries, including high-profile wins like Ken Paxton's landslide. While media and supporters hail Trump as the undisputed "king" of the GOP, she digs into historical data showing his past rates were strong but not flawless — especially against incumbents — and notes his current lower approval ratings amid issues like the Iran conflict. Iversen suggests the streak may be inflated by strategic incumbent endorsements in safe seats and raises skepticism about whether this truly reflects broad voter enthusiasm or just political machinery at work.

Wi-Fi's Terrifying New Superpower: It Sees You Without Camera

In this eye-opening video, cybersecurity creator Cyb3rMaddy explores the rapidly advancing world of Wi-Fi sensing—a technology that turns ordinary routers into motion detectors, gesture trackers, and even vital-sign monitors using nothing but radio waves. She demonstrates it live with a cheap ESP32 board that can detect presence, heart rate, breathing, and multiple people in a room, explains the new 802.11bf standard making this mainstream, and highlights chilling real-world uses like hotel room surveillance, hospital monitoring, and border security. While it offers convenient applications, the video warns of unregulated, camera-free surveillance creeping into everyday life and the growing privacy nightmare it creates.

Wednesday, May 27, 2026

When the Hero Child Is Gone: Multi-Generational Trauma and the Empty Crutch


In my previous post, I described the euphoric idealization, the confusing devaluation, the trauma bond, and the abrupt discard that often mark relationships involving untreated Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD) traits. What I didn’t fully explore there was the hidden engine driving much of that pain: multi-generational trauma and the quiet, unsustainable role that children—especially the oldest or most responsible one—can be forced to play.

This is the story of the “hero child” or parentified child: the one who becomes the emotional regulator, the mediator, the stabilizer for a parent whose own abandonment wounds and emotional dysregulation make everyday life feel like a constant threat of collapse. In families shaped by these traits, role reversal is common. The parent, battling intense fears of abandonment and unstable moods, leans on the child not just for practical help, but for nervous-system co-regulation — the daily work of soothing anxiety, absorbing mood swings, and providing the steady validation the parent’s fractured sense of self craves.

From the outside, the hero child may appear caring, responsible, and resilient. Inside, they carry a burden no child should bear. Research on parentification shows that children in these dynamics often grow up with heightened risks for depression, anxiety, substance use, boundary difficulties, and their own challenges with emotional regulation. The pattern doesn’t stop with one generation. Unresolved trauma and insecure attachment styles transmit forward, creating a legacy where each new generation inherits the same unspoken contract: “Your job is to keep me from falling apart.”

In the family system I stepped into, the oldest daughter had quietly become that primary emotional crutch. She comforted her mother through crises, absorbed the push-pull of closeness followed by sudden distance, and helped hold the family together amid chaos. She was bright, creative, and kind — qualities that made her both a natural fit for the role and someone who paid a heavy price for it. Her struggles with periodic depression and her eventual death were devastating, but they did not come out of nowhere.

4 Zionist Claims Built to Erase Palestine That Don't Pass the Smell Test

In this detailed video from History.Culture.projects, the creator systematically debunks four common claims used to undermine Palestinian history and indigeneity: that Palestinian Arabs are not indigenous, that Palestine was “a land without a people,” that Zionists “made the desert bloom,” and that no one identified as Palestinian before 1964. Drawing on genetic studies (showing 81-87% Bronze Age Canaanite continuity), Ottoman/British demographic records, agricultural surveys, historical texts from the 10th-17th centuries, and eyewitness accounts, the video argues these narratives fail against the evidence of a long-established, thriving Palestinian population and culture. A data-driven rebuttal aimed at countering what it calls Zionist misinformation.

Candace Owens: Another Trump 'Assassination Attempt' at the White House?

In her signature no-holds-barred style, Candace Owens reacts to yet another reported White House shooting incident involving Trump, questions the pattern of frequent attempts, and shares updates on her FOIA requests regarding a prior event (including an intriguing NSA redirect to the Office of the Secretary of Defense). She also covers a major Israel PR push by Vine & Fig Tree, backlash from Turning Point USA figures invoking Charlie Kirk against Thomas Massie, a bizarre personal attack on her 3-year-old daughter by Natalie Jean Beisner, and celebrates her "Brigitte Doll" earning its first national headline in The Hollywood Reporter. Classic Candace: sharp political commentary mixed with personal anecdotes and skepticism toward official narratives.

I Checked 50+ Movies for Occult Timestamps… and Found Something Terrifying

In this deep-dive video from Esoteric Guardian / Occult Inquisitor, the creator analyzes pivotal scenes from over 50 films to test the theory that key moments — revelations, turning points, or symbolic ruptures — frequently land on occult-loaded timestamps like 13:00, 22:00, 33:00, or combinations such as 66:06. The video explores psychological concepts like affective priming, examines strong and suggestive cases, dedicates time to Stanley Kubrick's precision, and weighs coincidences against potential deliberate numerological rituals embedded in cinema's runtime. It balances skepticism with eerie patterns, ultimately pondering cinema as a form of temporal ritual and what it means if these hidden timestamps are intentional. A fascinating watch for film buffs and conspiracy enthusiasts alike.