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.

I Didn't Believe the Bill Gates Tick Conspiracy... Until This

In this eye-opening episode of 51/49, host James Li dives into the rapid spread of the Lone Star tick across America and its link to alpha-gal syndrome — a severe red meat allergy triggered by tick bites. He examines peer-reviewed papers where bioethicists frame inducing meat allergies in humans as a "moral obligation" to combat climate change, explores viral claims involving Bill Gates, and uncovers declassified U.S. military history of biological tick experiments. A compelling mix of science, conspiracy, and uncomfortable questions about engineered health crises and environmental agendas.

I'm Done with Doom Journalism: Finding Light in the Darkness

In this raw, reflective video, Ian Carroll shares his shift away from constantly fixating on the world's evils and conspiracies, inspired by Owen Benjamin's optimistic conversation with Tucker Carlson about rejecting despair. He recounts attending his first county council meeting, where he helped secure a 2-year moratorium on data centers in his small town — a small but meaningful victory through local action. Carroll emphasizes balancing truth-telling with positive storytelling, introspection, and focusing on human resilience, silver linings, and building better communities rather than drowning in negativity. A refreshing call to stay informed without losing hope.

Dry Eyes After Cataract Surgery? Why It Happens & How to Fix It Fast

Optometrist Dr. Michael Nelson explains the common but often overlooked side effect of dry eye following cataract surgery, which affects nearly everyone to some degree. He breaks down the main causes — corneal nerve disruption from incisions, post-surgery inflammation affecting oil glands, and preservatives in medicated drops — and why it's usually about tear quality rather than quantity. Practical treatments include preservative-free lubricating drops (used 5 minutes after medicated ones), rest, anti-inflammatory prescriptions when needed, and proactive pre-surgery dry eye management for better healing and outcomes. A helpful guide for anyone preparing for or recovering from the procedure.

Who's The Girl In The Deftone's Jacuzzi?

In this engaging mini-documentary from Jenkem Magazine, skateboarder and photographer Rick Kosick recounts casually snapping the iconic, provocative photo of a woman in a jacuzzi during Deftones' "Around the Fur" recording sessions in Seattle—never imagining it would become the album cover. The film tracks down the woman, Lisa Hughes, who shares her laid-back memories of the party-filled night (including her signature "Silk Panties" drink), how the image affected her life, and reflections from the art director on embracing its raw, imperfect vibe. It's a fascinating look at how one spontaneous shot captured the spirit of a generation and stood the test of time.

Tuesday, May 26, 2026

The Storm, the Losses, and the Return to Solid Ground


A Note Before Reading

This is a quiet reflection on a difficult season — the sudden end of a marriage, layered losses, and the long path back to solid ground. I’m sharing it not to revisit old pain, but because writing it helped me make sense of everything, and I hope it might offer some comfort or clarity to anyone else walking through their own storm. Sometimes life rearranges itself in ways you never see coming. 


What begins as a steady chapter can suddenly shift, leaving you carrying multiple kinds of grief at once — the end of a marriage, the loss of a beloved companion, and the quiet ache of being shut out from mourning someone you truly cared about. This is my story of navigating that upheaval, the heavy layers it brought, and the slow, honest work of reclaiming my own ground.

It happened on the evening of my grandson’s birthday. The ground beneath me simply opened. My wife ended the relationship without warning. She was out of the house that same night. Two weeks later, the movers arrived to take her belongings. Two months after she moved out, my dog Charlie passed. His health had already started to decline in the months before she left, but it worsened fairly rapidly once she was gone. When his health declined, I was in day-to-day caretaker mode looking after him. Then, only two weeks later, I lost a young woman I had come to love deeply as a stepdaughter.

She was a talented musician, full of fire and creativity. As a musician myself, that was what bonded us early on, going back to 2018. We had a real adult-to-adult connection built on music and mutual respect. I had jammed with her, sent her gear, encouraged her, and I had promised to collaborate with her on her unreleased demos. Her loss hit me hard. What made it even harder was feeling quietly shut out from mourning someone I truly cared about — only an Instagram post discovered by chance announced her death. It left me grieving someone I truly cared about while feeling shut out from any shared sorrow.

Trump's Middle East Surrender: How Iran Won Big and Left Israel Exposed

In this episode of The CJ Werleman Show, host CJ argues that Iran has strategically driven the United States out of the Middle East by making American military presence unsustainable through relentless drone and missile attacks on bases, exposing US limitations in defending allies like Israel and Gulf states simultaneously. With damaged infrastructure, depleted interceptors, and Gulf nations denying US access, Trump faces pressure to accept Iran's terms amid a pivot to Asia, eroding Israel's security reliance on American power and marking the end of US regional dominance in favor of a stronger, resilient Iran.

7 Sneaky Ways Toxic Relationships Make You Lose Yourself

In this video by relationship coach Lise Leblanc, she explains how men often lose their sense of self in toxic relationships through subtle "demand characteristics" — invisible psychological pressures that reshape their behavior without them realizing it. The seven ways include becoming her emotional regulator (soothing outbursts), chasing her during withdrawals, hyper-anticipating her needs and moods (walking on eggshells), acting as her constant rescuer (absorbing blame and enabling bad behavior), endlessly proving your worth amid shifting tests, doubting your own reality (gaslighting yourself to align with hers), and prioritizing her above everything else. She uses client stories to illustrate how these patterns erode identity, confidence, and autonomy, offering clarity for those feeling like a unrecognizable version of themselves.

What We Got Wrong About Weed: From Reefer Madness to New Warnings

In this thoughtful video from Elephants in Rooms, Ken LaCorte traces marijuana’s shifting public perception—from 1930s racist propaganda and “Reefer Madness” scare tactics, through Nixon/Reagan-era crackdowns, to the AIDS-driven medical legalization push in the 1990s that became a gateway to recreational legalization and a $40 billion industry. He examines evolving science showing real risks, especially for adolescents (brain development changes, memory/attention deficits, motivational syndrome, IQ drops, and links to psychiatric disorders including schizophrenia), while noting cannabis is far safer than alcohol with no lethal dose; the piece highlights gaps in long-term research, the dangers of past exaggeration backfiring, and calls for a realistic middle-ground perspective now that use has doubled globally.

We're Being Held Hostage in a Technology Bubble (Documentary)

In this Truthstream Media documentary, the hosts argue that the United States has been deliberately held in an artificial, scarcity-driven technological bubble for decades, leaving its infrastructure decades behind other nations. They contrast crumbling, century-old New York subway systems (still using 1930s electromechanical relays and cloth-covered cabling) with Japan’s and China’s maglev trains reaching over 300 mph, highlight exorbitant costs and delays in projects like California’s high-speed rail and the Second Avenue subway, and question why the world’s wealthiest country can fund endless wars and foreign aid but claims it “can’t afford” modern upgrades, suggesting systemic forces keep Americans living in the technological past.