Happiness Therapy: Why I Changed My Wednesday Place

Last Wednesday, something shifted.

Not in the sky, not in the streets—but inside me.

I changed my Wednesday afternoon place. You might wonder why?

Well… let’s say I was just looking for a slow moment: a chai, some gentle music, my notebook, and the comfort of stories.

But even when you’re not looking for trouble—it has a strange way of finding you.

A man from my past showed up.

We had a history. I did him a favor once and saved his life, and in some odd twist of fate, he did me one now — just by showing up.

You see, some people share a table, and the image of the past is between them.

Two people with too much between them can’t stay in the same seat.

So I left.

I didn’t want to complicate things or have another chance of a crazy teacup.

I was looking for peace—only.


✨ A Glimpse of Love… and Something More

At my new place, I noticed a young woman sitting alone. For over an hour, she just stayed. Quiet. Thoughtful.
It felt like watching a version of myself. Alone.
Still.
Processing.

But then—suddenly—a man rushed in. Her boyfriend, wearing a dirty kitchen apron, crossing the street on his break just to share dinner with her.

A sandwich, a few laughs.
Love in the air.
And something simple… something real.


💛 Healing Before Happiness

That moment made me think about writing a different kind of story.
Not a love story. A therapy story.

Because here’s a truth that hit me hard that day:

Love isn’t supposed to heal you.
Healed souls are the only ones who can truly love.

To love deeply, to be happy—you have to be radically open, brave enough to be vulnerable.
And if you have pain, unhealed wounds, bitterness, resentment—then what you’re calling “love” might just be a desperate simulation.


💬 Why Am I Not Happy?

Ask yourself this:
“Why am I not happy?”

The answer might not be what you think.
Your soul might not be healed.
Your mind might still be looping old pain.
Your body might be worn from pretending.

Or maybe it’s all of it.

And here’s the hard part:
Only you can heal it.

Not your pet.
Not your partner.
Not money.
Not success.

Only you can walk toward that healing.


🛤 Change the Place. Change the Self.

Sometimes, you need to change your café.
Sometimes, you need to change your life.

Change your space.
Change your body.
Change your beliefs.
Change your relationship with your past, your habits, your silence, your noise.

Healing isn’t easy, but it’s real.
And it’s yours alone to find.


💥 My Own Unhappiness

For me?
I realized that I’m tired of living in a society where:

  • Good, normal people are constantly watched and controlled,
  • While toxic, dishonest people live free and are even supported in their chaos.

That distortion messes up my life and home. It steals joy.

Because I believe life should be normal and free—not one or the other.

You can’t be crazy and free, it doesn’t work.
You can’t be normal and controlled, it’s soul-destroying.

You must choose how you want to live—then fight for that version of freedom with everything you have.


🧭 Final Note

So no, this isn’t a love story.
It’s a therapy one.

A reminder that your healing is your responsibility.
That your peace might come from a different bench, a new table, a fresh song, or a warm cup of tea in a quieter corner.

Not by stealing or messing with someone else’s home and life! And naming it CONTROL!

Start there.

Happiness is always genuine!

https://youtu.be/PmeRiTUS_aU

What Love Is Not – A Mother’s Day Tribute to Maria

Today, I want to write a story about love. But not the love we think we know—because trauma often tricks us. When you’ve grown up in a household shaped by abuse, addiction, or mental illness, you may learn to love out of survival, not understanding what love truly means.

We believe we know love because we love people. But that’s not always enough. Sometimes, what we call “love” is just the ache to be loved in return. Trauma teaches us to perform love, to give too easily, hoping someone—anyone—will love us back. It creates a false version of ourselves: insecure, eager, desperate. Loving to be loved. And that’s the mistake.

Let me tell you the story of Maria—one of the most important stories of my life.

It was through Maria that I learned what love is not. Because of her, Mexico will always be close to my heart.


Maria’s Story

Maria was a Mexican dressmaker—young, beautiful, with black curly hair and always a big, colorful flower pinned to her hair. She was poor, but full of life, talent, and determination. She met an American man with a disability, and she married him, hoping to build a better life.

Maria worked tirelessly. She sold dresses, skirts, bedsheets—anything she could make with her hands. She had one baby. Then another. Then a third. And still, she handled everything: the household, the kids, and a husband with mental health issues who refused to work.

She didn’t have citizenship. She had almost nothing but her hands, her smile, her babies—and her dignity.

I remember meeting her on the street one day. I was with my partner, and he made fun of me in front of her—mocking my English and education to feel superior. I felt so humiliated.

But Maria stood up. With a naked baby on her hip, she looked him in the eye and said:

“A man is only as good as the way he treats his woman. And if you can’t lift her up, or worse—you try to put her down—you deserve to be alone.”

That day, Maria taught me what dignity looks like. And she showed me what love is not.


The Silent Sisterhood

My mother didn’t speak English. Maria didn’t speak my mother’s language either. But they always understood each other—through signs, gestures, glances. Because abused women always understand each other.

On the bus, Mama would always greet Maria, and Maria would always respond. Two women, broken but resilient, recognizing something familiar in one another.

Maria eventually left her husband. She took her three kids, found a job, and chose freedom. She is alive. She is free.

My mother didn’t get that chance. She went back to our home country, where she lived a life of abuse. She died in the same bed with her abuser—left to die, by the one who broke her.


This Mother’s Day

As Mother’s Day arrives, I think of Maria.

I think of the strength of women.
I think of freedom.
I think of the importance of knowing what love is not—so we can finally recognize what it is.

Love isn’t control.
Love isn’t humiliation.
Love isn’t earned through suffering.

Love is freedom. Love is dignity. Love is normal.

If someone’s mind cannot understand the normality of love because of their own trauma or mental illness, we must leave them.

We must protect our life, peace, and protect those we love.

Maria is free. My mother is gone.

And I am here—still learning, still healing, still remembering.

Happy Mother’s Day to every woman who loved through pain.

And to those who had the courage to walk away from what love is not.

Thank you, Maria.

Photo by Samer Daboul on Pexels.com


Thank you, Mama.

Photo by Yogendra Singh on Pexels.com


Thank you, Mexico.