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.

The Finger of Reality: Dreams, Madness, and the Call for a Healthy Society

The Finger of Reality

What are humans really looking for?
To be healthy, happy, supported, and to feel safe and secure in their private lives — and to be together.

Humans are so simple! Unless, of course, they are not mentally well.
Because if they are crazy, they will destroy every one of these basic needs and drag others down with them.

To live like a true human, you must be both physically and mentally healthy.
We can’t afford to damage either one.

If you aren’t physically or mentally healthy, not only will you fail at your own tasks, but you will also disrupt the lives of others.


Everyday Battles

And yes, my stalker was at it again today — right when I left my house!
He tracks my movements, him and his dirty, crazy, organized crime family gang. (Pictures were taken!)

This is what mental insanity leads to: obsessions, craziness, and the destruction of other people’s lives.
And it happens because society allows it — all in the name of whatever twisted values they claim to defend, and because they don’t want to spend money on properly dealing with the crazies on the streets or the gangs that operate openly.

“I don’t see you, you don’t see me… and we live happily ever after together. You trying to put me down, and me trying to protect myself.”

But that’s not a good society.
It’s a dirty, corrupted one, where rules are no longer made for people — but for creating chaos.


The Dream: Visitors Beyond

In my dreams, I was inside a huge, all-glass tower on the top-level apartments.
It seemed that my sister owned one of them, and she gave me a tour of her home.

While walking around, I saw a UFO outside the glass walls — a massive globe made of interconnected cards.
It had come out of nowhere from space, moving fast, and then stopped right in front of our windows, watching us.
It followed us as we walked through the apartment.

It was terrifying to see a giant, card-constructed sphere tracking our movements.
We tried to hide from it.
The unknown is always frightening!


The Shape-Shifter

When we moved to the other side of the house, there was another globe — but this one was made from interconnected domino chips.
It could change its shape: from a globe, to a square, to a car, to a bird… even to an arm with a pointed index finger.

As we watched, fascinated by how it shifted forms, a piece of it transformed into an arm, pointing directly at me through the glass.

It was a very scary dream — it felt like I had stepped into another dimension.

When I woke up, I immediately remembered the visual patterns I had seen after ketamine anesthesia — the same moving hexagonal and octagonal shapes, shiny and interconnected in flowing colors.
Later, I even saw a woman’s bag decorated with the same pattern!


A Call for True Humanity

We desperately need normal societies filled with normal, healthy people.
Otherwise, we will destroy humanity — driven by the madness of trying to control the world and replacing normality with abnormality.

The Finger!
It reminds me of The Creation of Adam by Michelangelo Buonarroti.

DMV Diaries: Love, Lies & Expired Licenses

Stories keep you surviving — in society, in relationships, and in the craziness around us. Sometimes survival itself is easier than surviving them.

Never, ever get into a relationship without chemistry and love. It will not work. No matter how hard you try, it won’t work.

Doesn’t matter what plans you made in your mind, what your parents told you, or how much you once fell in love with that piece of shit.
It won’t matter.

A relationship that works needs chemistry, love, commitment, communication, and openness — for better or worse.

Otherwise, it’s not a relationship and never will be.

You have options: friends with benefits or a vibrator, lol. 🤷‍♀️

But this is not the story about that.

This story is from yesterday, written today, just to take my mind off a crazy family relationship.



He never loved me. Never respected me. Not him, not his family — only himself.

Today he chose to cough in my face, keep the windows closed, and spread his virus to me. And he succeeded.

Filthy and crazy. And I live like this because… I have no other options yet.

More hell than home.

But now — let’s dream a little.
(In a house full of crazy people and a partner even crazier.)



The story from yesterday… DMV hall.

They refused to change my driving license because I didn’t pay my auto insurances.
Socialism broke me. Broke as hell.

My car Maritza is old and broken too.

There are no jobs here for an “alien” American nurse like me — especially not a wild, outspoken one.

On social assistance, you can’t pay auto insurance.

But without a car, you can’t find a job either.
(Unless you want to become part of organized crime or a CIA/police asset — no thanks!



And then… the story.

She’s maybe 17 or 18. Blonde, curly hair, blue eyes.
A bud of a young girl, blooming this spring like a magnolia flower. 🌸
Boho T-shirt, jeans, boots, curls bouncing everywhere.
She talks fast, every “s” and “r” twisted by a heavy British accent.
She’s a doll. A happy, wild little doll.

Waiting for her boyfriend’s DMV documents.


And about him? Lol.
He’s somewhere between Middle Eastern and Indian.
Skinny, chocolate au lait skin, trying so hard to walk like Salman Khan.
(And doing a good job, judging by her starry eyes.)


He knows how to lead her crazy hippie heart.
Let’s call him Krishna.
Let’s call her Lorelai.
(Why not? It fits, lol.)


And me?
The old, pissed-off “granny” fighting DMV battles without a valid ID.
Already halfway to becoming illegal in the U.S. 😂

This country hates me, but whatever. I survive.

Looking around… 75% of people at DMV were batshit crazy, poor, abused, hopeless.

Hell, baby. No hope here.



Until… I saw them.


A sunshine ray in my tired, old eyes! ☀️

She, sweet and wild.
Her crazy mom calling her non-stop.
“WHERE ARE YOU? GIVE ME THE ADDRESS OF THE DMV!!” (screaming through the phone)


I laughed inside.
Poor mom. How many times did I lie to mine? 😂

We were young and wild too… so in love.

We just married the wrong ones. That’s all.


Will Lorelai follow her heart?

Granny decided to “spy” a little more… 👀 lol.



Mom keeps yelling.

Lorelai sweetly lies: “I don’t have the address!”


I loved her instantly — trying so hard to protect her little young freedom.


And I saw myself in her eyes.
Young. Wild. In love.


Him — young too — buying detergent for his mom. LOL

Me — sitting in a train, pretending to study the “Sleep and Dreams,” the single class I hated.
(That stupid class kept me away from becoming a doctor. One stupid class changed everything.)

You don’t know what you’ve lost until it’s gone forever.



Between the yelling and emotional blackmail… Krishna steps in.


Takes the phone, calms crazy mom down, assuring her Lorelai is safe.

(And I laughed watching it.)


Back in our day, no cell phones. No GPS. No tracking.
Love was free.

You could hold hands on a train between two cities — no one knew where you were, or what you were doing.

We lied better too, lol. 😂


Finally, crazy mom stopped.



And then… therapist mode activated.


I walked over.
Mother. Daughter. Granny.
All parts of me, speaking at once.


“Listen… all mothers are crazy,” I said, laughing.

Because it’s true.
We love our kids too much.
We are scared. Anxious.
We want to protect them from our mistakes and theirs.
We want them to live, to dream, to be safe.

To know the difference between good and bad before it’s too late.

Because if you don’t, you end up like us — trapped in miserable relationships, living miserable lives.



Lorelai laughed.
Because she knew I was right.


But she was so in love.
And her mom didn’t understand.

So I told her:


“You must start building BOUNDARIES.
Explain clearly what you want.
And if they don’t listen?
Learn to COMMUNICATE better, not lie.

Live FREE.
Find EMOTIONAL SUPPORT from those who truly care.
Not everyone gets that.
Some of us never had it.”



And I went back home.

Where a 25-year nightmare relationship coughed in my face.
Refused to clean his own piss off the floor and f/u with the doctor.
Refused to do laundry.
Refused to even open the window.

No willingness to communicate. No love. No chemistry. No family.

Some mistakes cannot be repaired.



So Lorelai and Krishna…

LIVE.
Be happy.
Protect each other.


And if one day you want a real family, know what it really means.
Otherwise — let it be a beautiful adventure, no harm!


Because at 18…
There’s no harm in just falling in love with life. ❤️

Why I Love Being Old


I never thought I’d say it, but getting older is like unlocking the final level of a video game where you gain infinite power-ups and stop caring about pointless side quests.

I’ve become a superhero of selective not-giving-a-damn, and honestly? It’s glorious.

Take a couple of days ago, for example.

I was on my way to take out the garbage when I saw a man arguing with a woman because she’d left the window open in winter. He was gesturing wildly like he’d just discovered fire, ranting about her “lack of common sense.”

Younger me might have stood there, quietly cringing. Old me? I shuffled closer in my slippery house shoes and said, “Sir, if you spent this much energy improving your mental health, you wouldn’t need to gaslight women about open windows. Maybe she needed to air out your trash vibes!”

His jaw dropped faster than my neighbor’s Wi-Fi signal, and I shuffled off, leaving him speechless. Life’s too short to bother with crazy people .

That’s the beauty of my age. Nonsense? Snip. Toxic people? Bye. Dumb trends? Not today. If it doesn’t spark joy, honesty, or humor, it’s out faster than I can forget where I put my keys.

Speaking of joy, I’ve learned how to savor the little things.

This morning, I drank my coffee while watching YouTube videos.

One reminded me of my old coworkers, those professional squabblers who’d argue about who got the easy assignments and whose backside to kiss for a promotion.

I chuckled, knowing I’d never have to sit through another soul-sucking team meeting again.

Not caring what people think is wildly liberating.

Last week, I wore my floral pajama pants to the bakery. Did anyone care? Nope. Would I have cared if they did? Absolutely not. I used to stress over being “professional,” “smart,” a “good wife,” and an “amazing nurse.”

And for what? To get nods of approval from strangers in ties and hear my husband ask, “Is there more food?”

Not anymore.

But here’s the thing: ignoring nonsense doesn’t mean ignoring what matters.

I still call my relatives, even if they tell the same half-hour stories on repeat.

I try new things, like underwater swimming, even though a seal having an existential crisis looks better than me, LOL.

And I tell my friends I love them more often because you never know how much pain they might be hiding, knowing that you’re suffering too.

Looking back, I think my mom understood this.

She used to laugh when the vacuum stopped mid-cleaning and say, “Guess it’s snack time!” I’d roll my eyes and mutter, “Just finish the chore!”

But now I see her wisdom. Chores will wait; snacks—and moments of joy—won’t.

Oh, and my hair? I’ve gone full buzzcut.

Not because I’m trendy, but because some dirty old man at work kept “admiring” my hair while wearing the same pair of pee-stained white pants every day.

Let’s just say, I took away his excuse for creepy compliments. No hair, no harassment.


So here’s my advice: Age isn’t about wrinkles or gray hairs; it’s about realizing what’s worth your energy.

Call out the nonsense when it matters, and let the rest drift away like autumn leaves in the wind. And always, boundaries up, my house is MY CASTEL.

Snack from your fridge, not mine! LOL

Now, if you’ll excuse me, there’s an YT beautiful man to watch on and a glass of mulled Manischewitz calling my name.

Pro tip: Boil it until the alcohol evaporates, add cinnamon, dried lemon, orange, and a dash of pepper. It’s the only way I drink wine these days. Cheers!

Love, Sanity, and Saving Romania

Compassion? Not love.
Being a good kid who listens to your parents? Still not love.
Empathy? Nope, not love either.
Having a great time? Definitely not love (but I hope it’s fun).
Laughing and hanging out with friends? Nice, but not love.
Admiring someone from afar? Creepy, not love.
Power and money? Not love (just business).

Now, what IS love?

Listen closely: Love is TWO people, not one, not three, not a football team—just TWO people in a relationship, loving each other like sane, functional adults.

Love is calm, normal, and grows over time, like bread rising (no drama).
Love is caring for someone even when they’re a mess—yes, even when they look like a wet mop or a giant whale.
Love is feeling and thinking as a team, not one person doing all the work while the other binge-watches Netflix.


And let’s be clear: Love is NOT CRAZINESS.

If your relationship feels like a circus with crazy people, it’s not love—it’s chaos.

So here’s the deal: Before jumping into a relationship or, heaven forbid, MARRIAGE, ask yourself this vital question:


“Who is the crazy one?”

Because, folks, CRAZINESS will not only ruin your life, your partner’s life, and your dog’s peace of mind—it’ll also mess up the kids, the families, and possibly an entire country. (Yes, I’m looking at you, Romania. Don’t let it happen!)

So, save yourself, save your family, and SAVE ROMANIA.

Say NO to CRAZINESS.

Unless you want your CRAZINESS story to double as a disaster movie.

https://x.com/i/broadcasts/1ZkJzRjWObdJv