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Economic Warfare and the Hidden Cost of Mental Health

Not long ago, I was sitting at the kitchen table working out the details of a family vacation. Nothing extravagant. Just something to look forward to. But the numbers kept coming up short, so I started trimming. Fewer nights. Shorter drive. Less of everything. About the time I was reworking the budget for the third time, my phone buzzed. A family member needed help covering utilities. They had not seen a raise in several years, and what used to stretch far enough no longer did. The costs had simply outrun them. I sat there for a moment with both things in my hands at once. My smaller vacation and their light bill. Neither of us had done anything wrong. Neither of us had made foolish decisions. We were both just absorbing something that had been decided somewhere far above either of our kitchen tables. I did not have a name for what I was feeling in that moment. It was not quite anger and not quite grief. It was somewhere in between, quiet and heavy, the way things feel when you unders...

Kinships and Inheritance

Every family passes something forward. Sometimes it is wisdom. Sometimes it is pain. Most often, it is both riding in the same truck. Long before we take our first breath, inheritance has already begun shaping the path beneath our feet. When most people hear the word inheritance, they think of money, property, heirlooms, or family treasures passed from one generation to the next. Yet some of the most powerful inheritances never appear in a will. They arrive quietly through family stories, expectations, beliefs, fears, habits, strengths, and wounds carried across generations. Every family leaves something behind for those who follow. Some inherit resilience forged through hardship. Some inherit a strong work ethic, compassion, loyalty, creativity, or a deep sense of community. These are gifts that enrich not only individuals but entire family lines. Others inherit something far more complicated. They inherit silence where difficult conversations should have occurred. They inherit ...

When the Body Wakes Before the Mind

Adult sleepwalking, clinically known as somnambulism, is often misunderstood as a quirky or dramatic sleep behavior. In reality, it reflects a deeper neurological misalignment in how the brain transitions between sleep stages. It is not dreaming acted out, nor is it a psychological issue. What is happening is a breakdown in coordination between parts of the brain that are meant to stay asleep and parts that unintentionally wake up. Sleepwalking occurs almost entirely during deep non REM sleep, particularly slow wave sleep, the phase when the brain is supposed to be most offline. In adults who sleepwalk, the brain does not move cleanly from sleep to wakefulness. Instead, motor and sensory regions partially activate while areas responsible for reasoning, judgment, insight, and memory remain deeply asleep. The result is a strange neurological middle ground where the body can move but the mind never fully arrives. This phenomenon is best explained by what researchers call partial arousal...

The Echoes of Trauma

Trauma rarely stays where it started. It lingers. It carries. It echoes. Those echoes can be hard, raw, sharp, and intense, arriving suddenly and without warning, like the door never fully closed on what happened. When this occurs, the body often reacts before the mind has a chance to catch up. The heart races. Muscles tighten. Breathing shortens. The nervous system can shift rapidly into survival mode. For the person experiencing it, this can feel frightening, confusing, and deeply overwhelming, especially when nothing dangerous appears to be happening in the present. Other echoes are quieter and easier to miss. They move in slowly and disguise themselves as everyday patterns. Overthinking. Emotional distance. People pleasing. Perfectionism. Staying busy to avoid stillness. For many people, these echoes develop gradually and feel less dramatic, but they are no less exhausting. They keep the nervous system from fully resting and leave a person feeling tense, guarded, or perpetually o...

Navigating Life Successfully

A question appeared on social media recently asking, "What's one thing you could talk about for thirty minutes without preparation?" My answer came quickly. Navigating life successfully and what that means to each of us. The answer surprised me at first. Then I reckon it probably shouldn't have. The longer I live, the more interesting people become. Everywhere I look, I see folks trying to figure out how to build a life worth living. Some of us are chasing dreams. Some of us are recovering from them. Some of us are climbing mountains. Some of us are trying to crawl out of valleys. Most are simply doing the best they can with the hand life dealt them. After watching that unfold year after year, I have come to suspect that many of life's questions are really the same question wearing different clothes. How do I live this life well? The circumstances may differ, but the question remains remarkably consistent. A young adult trying to determine who they want to become ...

Older Generations Already Understood Mental Health. Nobody Really Gave Them Credit.

Older Southern and country generations may not have said "his nervous system is experiencing chronic hyperarousal due to unresolved trauma." No sir. They said "Boy ain't sat still since Reagan was in office." And somehow everybody knew exactly what they meant. That is the thing modern folks sometimes miss when they look backward at older rural generations. They assume that because people did not use clinical language, they must not have understood emotional struggle. Oh, they understood people just fine, partner. They simply looked through a different lens. They described people through weather patterns, fence posts, worn-out boots, fishing trips, church casseroles, long silences on porches, and whichever family member was currently acting catawampus at the reunion. They did not say he struggles with anxiety. They said that boy's wound up tighter than a tree knot. They did not say she suppresses her emotions. They said that woman swallows feelings like ...

I Thought I Was Still Living

Most people think survival looks dramatic. They imagine catastrophe. Sirens. Breakdowns. Rock bottom. Visible suffering. But survival mode is often much quieter than that. Sometimes it looks like paying bills, going to work, answering texts, smiling at people in grocery stores, making dinner, and folding laundry. Existing so routinely that nobody notices your spirit quietly left the room three years ago. That is the dangerous part. Some people are not collapsing. They are functioning. And functioning can hide an enormous amount of emotional absence. A nervous system trapped in chronic stress, grief, trauma, fear, burnout, or emotional exhaustion does something remarkable and terrifying at the same time: it narrows perception. The brain begins prioritizing endurance over experience. Threat detection over wonder. Adaptation over presence. Energy conservation over emotional connection. Not beauty. Not awe. Not curiosity. Not the warmth of being fully alive inside your own moments. Surviva...