Monday, March 16, 2026

The World Can be an Unforgiving Place

 The world can be an unforgiving place, especially for those who've walked through fire long before they were old enough to understand why. Many of us carry invisible scars from childhoods marked by abuse, physical blows that left bruises all over my body, sexual violations that stole innocence for years, emotional cruelty that chipped away at self-worth, and the relentless hunger of safety, love, and stability. These aren't rare stories whispered in the shadows; they're the lived realities of countless survivors who wake up every day choosing to keep going.


I share my own history not for pity, but because silence only lets the pain fester. Growing up, fear wasn't an occasional visitor—it was a permanent resident. Days blurred into nights of wondering if I'd eat, if I'd be safe, if anyone would notice I was drowning. There was no reliable adult to turn to, no soft place to land. The abuse came in waves: hands that should have protected instead harmed, words that should have built instead tore down, betrayals that taught me early that trust is a luxury few can afford.


Yet somehow, against all odds, I survived. And when I became a parent, I made a vow: the cycle stops here. I poured everything into breaking those patterns—learning everything on our own (not having internet or real know how, offering consistency, showing up emotionally even when my own tank felt empty. I read books on trauma-informed parenting, sought therapy when I could, and worked tirelessly to give my children the security and love I never had. I wanted them to know what unconditional love feels like, to never question if they're worthy or safe.


But the world outside our home doesn't always cooperate. Children grow up and step into a society that often rewards selfishness, where anger spreads like wildfire on social media, where people chase validation at the expense of empathy. Despite the love and support poured into them, some get swept up in that current. They absorb the world's hardness, mirror its cruelty, and—heartbreakingly—turn it back toward the very family that fought so hard to protect them. The rejection stings deeper because it's not from strangers; it's from the ones you held through nightmares, the ones you promised a different life.


Research shows this isn't uncommon. Studies on intergenerational trauma reveal that while many survivors successfully interrupt the cycle of abuse—through awareness, therapy, and intentional choices—external influences can still pull children toward harmful behaviors. The transmission of trauma isn't inevitable; estimates suggest parents with maltreatment histories are at higher risk, but protective factors like strong support systems or trauma-informed approaches can significantly reduce it. Yet even when we do everything "right," the world can still gobble them up, leaving parents with waves of grief, tears in private moments, and the ache of abandonment that no one prepares you for.


This is why judgment cuts so deeply. When people rush to congratulate one side in a family rift or encourage cutting ties without knowing the full story, they add weight to an already crushing load. They don't see the years of sacrifice, the nights spent crying over how to parent better, the fear that despite it all, the cycle might creep back in subtle ways. They see surface-level drama and pick sides, feeding division instead of understanding.


Anyone who truly values family would advocate for reconciliation where possible—through honest conversations, therapy, boundaries with compassion, or simply time to heal. Abandonment should never be the first or easiest answer. It perpetuates isolation, which trauma already breeds so effectively.


To those on the outside looking in: please pause before offering your two cents. The world is hard enough without well-meaning but uninformed opinions fueling more pain. You don't know the hunger, the fear, the daily battles to rewrite a script written in someone else's handwriting. You don't know the cost of trying to break a cycle that feels unbreakable.


If my story reaches even one person—someone still fighting to protect their kids, someone doubting their efforts were enough, someone wondering if sharing their truth matters—then opening these wounds publicly will have been worth it. Healing isn't linear, and neither is parenting through trauma. But every day we choose love over repetition, we chip away at the cycle. We may not stop it entirely for everyone, but we can refuse to let it define us.


To fellow survivors: you're not alone. Your efforts matter, even when the results hurt. Keep holding space for grace—both for your children and for yourself. The world may be harsh, but your heart doesn't have to be.


And to anyone reading this who recognizes pieces of their own story: if you're ready, reach out. Therapy, support groups, trauma-informed resources—there are paths forward. Breaking the cycle isn't about perfection; it's about persistence. You've already survived the hardest part. Now, let's keep choosing differently, one intentional moment at a time.

Peace, Love and EnJOY

Log Home Mom










Friday, February 20, 2026

How This Selfish Rivalry Leads to Parents Losing Their Child

Jealousy Turns Toxic — The adult child starts seeing the parent's success not as a family win, but as a personal threat or humiliation. They might feel "robbed" of spotlight, resent commissions flowing up while being outranked, or envy the parent's larger network/social validation. cult culture amplifies this with constant rankings, leaderboards, and "who's crushing it" narratives—making every family member's win feel like a comparative loss.

Selfish Projection and Blame-Shifting — Instead of celebrating or learning from the parent's hustle, the child accuses them of "stealing thunder," being "too aggressive," "not grateful," or "disloyal to the team." They weaponize teachings about ditching "negative energy" or "dream stealers" to justify pulling away, framing the parent as the problem to avoid facing their own envy or underperformance.
Escalation to No Contact — Tensions build through arguments ("Stop bragging," "You're making me look bad," "This was supposed to be my thing"). The child might demand the parent downplay achievements, stop recruiting certain people, or defer to them—demands the parent rejects as unfair. When refused, the child ghosts, blocks, or declares no contact, often rationalizing it as "self-care" or "protecting my mindset." The parent is left devastated, confused, and grieving the loss of their child over a predatory scheme.
The Parent's Side of the Pain — Parents in this spot often feel profound guilt ("I should have held back to spare their feelings"), betrayal ("I joined to support them!"), and helplessness. They lose not just the relationship but the joy of shared "success" they thought would bond them. Some parents give up hoping to salvage things, only to find the rift permanent because the child's resentment has calcified.

This isn't widespread in public stories, but it echoes broader patterns of family estrangement where jealousy, role reversal, or competition fractures bonds—amplified by zero-sum hierarchy. Parents end up mourning the "loss" of their child to this selfish rivalry, sometimes permanently, while the child isolates deeper in their echo chamber.
The tragedy? Promises of "financial freedom" and "building with family," but it engineers division through comparison and status. No legitimate opportunity should cost you your child—or force a parent to watch their kid walk away over rank envy. If a "business" turns love into rivalry, it's not worth it. Real family celebrates each other's wins without sponsorship lines or resentment. Protecting those bonds means walking away before the machine claims another relationship.

As I sit here in the quiet of our log home, the one we dreamed about in so many ways, my heart aches with a love that time and silence can't dim. The house now feels empty, the photos on the wall have been put away, and every sunrise reminds me of the life we thought we were building.

We never imagined this distance between us. When you invited us into that "opportunity," we joined with open hearts—excited to support you, to share in what we thought could be a family adventure. We poured ourselves in, hoping it would bring us closer, not pull us apart. But somewhere along the way, things shifted. Ranks and wins became measures that hurt more than they helped, and what started as shared dreams turned into something competitive, something painful. We saw the resentment build in your eyes, the way our progress felt like a threat instead of a triumph we could all celebrate. We understand now how deeply that jealousy cut—how it twisted pride into pain, and how the structure of it all made love feel conditional on position rather than unconditional like it always has been for us.

We miss what was stolen. Every single day. We miss laughs echoing through the house, seeing you every day, the way you'd share your dreams and we'd cheer the loudest. We miss being part of your life—not as downlines, but as your parents who have loved you fiercely since before you took your first breath.

Know this: our love for you has never wavered, not for a second. It isn't tied to success, ranks, money, We never needed the money.

The door is always open.

Until then, we carry you in every quiet moment, every prayer, every memory that still makes us smile through tears. You are our children, our pride, our greatest joy. Nothing changes that. Not distance, not time, not old wounds.

We love you beyond words, beyond measure, forever.

But we must speak plainly now, with the raw seriousness this pain demands: to those who participated in this immense hurt—who encouraged, enabled, or cheered the cutting off of family over ranks, commissions, or "protecting energy"—your own children are watching. You are demonstrating, in real time, how disposable loved ones can be when they don't align with the hustle or the vision. When this same cold logic turns on you one day—when someone you love walks away for "better vibes" or perceived disloyalty—may they choose mercy, may they hold on with the fierce love you failed to model. We pray it never happens to you, because no parent should endure this living death.

No declaration, no boundary, no script can erase the fact that we remain your parents, your grandparents to little ones. You cannot command that away. Our hearts are forever broken, shattered in ways that may never fully mend. A vital part of us has died in this process—the part that once laughed freely, that dreamed of family gatherings without tension, that believed shared dreams could never turn so cruel.

Yet even in this devastation, our arms are still open. The door isn't just ajar—it's flung wide, waiting for any sign from you. A text, a voice note, a simple "I'm here" would be enough to start. No lectures, no demands for explanations or apologies. Just the chance to breathe again, to begin healing what was torn apart.

Don't let pride, old resentment, or the echoes of that toxic system keep us apart any longer. Life is too short, love too precious.







Peace, Love and Enjoy Life.
Log Home Mom


Tuesday, January 6, 2026

Snow Ice Cream Recipe



 This is one of my favorite foods ever! I have fond memories of looking forward to this when it snowed when I was a little girl in Tennessee. 

Go make memories with your kids today!