Sunday, April 5, 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.

The Gnostic Crucifixion: Why Jesus Was Laughing on the Cross

The orthodox Easter story highlights a crucifixion, an empty tomb, and a physical resurrection. A radically different version is told by the Gnostic gospels, which includes the Gospel of Judas, the Gospel of Philip, and the Second Treatise of the Great Seth. In these banned texts from the Nag Hammadi library, the crucifixion was an illusion, the archons tortured a shell while the living Jesus watched and laughed, and Judas was not a traitor but the only disciple who truly understood. The Gnostic resurrection is not a future event at the end of time, but rather a spiritual awakening that can be experienced right now in this life. This video explores what these early Christian texts reveal about the hidden meaning of Easter, the nature of the divine spark, and why the first Gnostics saw waking up, not waiting, as the whole point of the story.

Why Religions Use Ritual Sex

In ancient times, altars were not solely used for slaughter. They were used for sex. The first money ever created was a temple token that granted access to a goddess. The word 'glamour' was a Scottish word for a magic spell. Aleister Crowley revealed a recipe for a sacramental cake that consisted of semen and menstrual blood and referred to it as the true Eucharist. Jeffrey Epstein told people that he was harvesting the sexual energy of young girls. The Whore of Babylon is depicted in the Book of Revelation sitting on the currents of global commerce while holding a golden cup. All of those things are interconnected. From the temple economy of ancient Sumer to Crowley's O.T.O. to Epstein's Island to the Whore of Babylon, I lay out how sacred sexual technology works, how it was inverted into a weapon, and why the global financial system still runs on an architecture built on temple prostitution.

US Fighter Jet Down in Iran and Israel Under Attack

A US F-15E fighter jet has been shot down over Iran, triggering a dangerous escalation in the Middle East. As tensions rise, Iran launches missile and drone attacks on Israel and US allies, while President Trump issues a 48-hour ultimatum. This situation could reshape global power, oil markets, and international security.

Going to the Moon (Umm... Not Really)

Boston in the 1800 and 1900s ( Ai Reconstruction)

Gigi Young: JD Vance, Matt Gaetz, UFO Demons & Psychic Alien Hybrids

Dan Bongino Continues His Downward Spiral

Trump Advisors Compare Him To Jesus Christ

What Really Happens to Waste in Landfills Over Time?

Saturday, April 4, 2026

Surviving a Borderline Relationship


For several years I lived inside a relationship that felt like the deepest love I’d ever known—until it didn’t. The woman I married displayed patterns I only later understood through research, therapy, and daily journaling. What I experienced aligns closely with Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD), a mental health condition marked by intense fear of abandonment, unstable relationships, rapidly shifting moods, and a fragile sense of self.

In plain language, BPD is not “being dramatic.” It’s a pervasive pattern of emotional dysregulation that usually begins by early adulthood. The DSM-5 lists nine criteria; a formal diagnosis requires at least five. Core features include frantic efforts to avoid real or imagined abandonment, “splitting” (seeing people as all-good or all-bad), chronic emptiness, and intense, short-lived anger or anxiety. Untreated, it creates an exhausting push-pull cycle for everyone involved. I’m sharing this not to diagnose anyone—only a qualified clinician can do that—but to name the dynamic that left me confused and disoriented, and ultimately set me free.

The Dream Phase: Idealization That Feels Like Destiny

In the beginning, it was euphoric. She showered me with affection, gratitude, and a sense of being truly seen. She thanked me repeatedly for emotional support, told me I was her rock, and created an intense bond that felt destined. This is classic BPD idealization: the partner is placed on a pedestal as the perfect soul mate who will finally fill the chronic emptiness and abandonment wound.

Why does it feel so intoxicating? Because the intensity is genuine in the moment. The person with BPD often mirrors your values, shares your interests, and creates an instant “we’re the same” bond. For someone who values steadiness and care, it felt like I had finally found the deep connection I’d always wanted. The love-bombing isn’t manipulation in the calculated sense; it’s the BPD brain flooding the relationship with dopamine and hope. I believed I had found my person.

Bill Cooper's Predictions - Then vs. Now

In 1992, Bill Cooper made a series of statements that, at the time, seemed impossible. Extreme. Even irrational. Despite decades later, some of those words still feel uncomfortably familiar. In this video, we go back to those original recordings — breaking down what he actually said, the patterns he pointed to, and why so many people believe we might be watching parts of it unfold right now.

Iran Strikes Kuwait's Largest Oil Refinery — Gulf Energy War Escalates