POEMS & ARTICLES: 1. SOME PEOPLE CONSIDER FEMINITY TO BE A WEAKNESS. 2. SOME PEOPLE'S ATTITUDES ARE APPALLING. 3. PORCH PIRATES ARE CALLING THE COP. 4. THE INTERNET TROLL 5. HE/SHE UNNECESSARILY COMBATIVE Continuously Constant. 6 OVERCOME ADVERSITY.
POEMS & ARTICLES: 1. SOME PEOPLE CONSIDER FEMINITY TO BE A WEAKNESS. 2. SOME PEOPLE'S ATTITUDES ARE APPALLING. 3. PORCH PIRATES ARE CALLING THE COP. 4. THE INTERNET TROLL 5. HE/SHE UNNECESSARILY COMBATIVE Continuously Constant. 6 OVERCOME ADVERSITIES.
SOME PEOPLE CONSIDER FEMINITY TO BE A WEAKNESS.
Article.
Feminine expression is often misread through cultural shorthand that equates softness with incapacity. This is a linguistic and social error: softness can be strategy, not surrender. Feminine traits emotional attunement, relational intelligence, collaborative orientation are adaptive skills in leadership, caregiving, and conflict resolution. The problem is not femininity itself but the hierarchy that prizes visible force over subtle competence.
- Why the misreading happens: cultural narratives valorize immediacy and spectacle; quiet competence is invisible.
- What femininity actually offers: pattern recognition in relationships, calibrated empathy, and durable social capital.
- How to reframe it: treat feminine behaviors as tools in a toolkit rather than fixed identities; evaluate outcomes, not aesthetics.
Practical steps: name the skill you admire (listening, boundary setting, repair), practice it deliberately, and call it out publicly when it produces results. Changing the grammar of praise shifts what people perceive as strength.
Poem.
They call the soft voice weak,
but the soft voice remembers names,
reads the room like a map,
and stitches the torn places back together.
Strength that shouts breaks windows;
strength that listens rebuilds houses.
Do not mistake gentleness for absence of force
it is a different kind of power, steady as a tide.
SOME PEOPLE'S ATTITUDES ARE APPALLING.
Article.
Appalling attitudes entitlement, cruelty, willful ignorance are social toxins. They corrode trust, normalize harm, and make ordinary interactions costly. Naming an attitude as appalling is not moralizing for its own sake; it is a diagnostic act that identifies behaviors that require correction.
- Patterns to watch: persistent dismissal of others, weaponized sarcasm, refusal to accept responsibility.
- Why they persist: social reinforcement, echo chambers, and lack of accountability.
- How to respond: set clear boundaries, model alternative language, and escalate when safety or dignity is at stake.
Intervention is both personal and structural. On the personal level, refuse to normalize the behavior; on the structural level, create consequences and incentives for better conduct.
Poem.
Attitude like a cracked mirror,
reflecting only what it wants to see.
Words sharpened into small knives,
thrown across the table for sport.
We learn to duck, to smile, to forgive
until forgiveness becomes the fuel.
Name the crack. Replace the glass.
Let the room breathe again.
PORCH PIRATES ARE CALLING THE COP.
Article.
Porch theft is a modern nuisance that escalates into a civic problem when it becomes routine. Calling the police is a reasonable response, but it is one tool among many. Effective community responses combine prevention, documentation, and collective action.
- Immediate steps: document the incident with timestamps and photos, check nearby cameras, and report to local law enforcement.
- Preventive measures: secure delivery options, neighbor pickup networks, and visible deterrents like cameras and lighting.
- Community strategies: neighborhood watch coordination, shared delivery lockers, and working with carriers to require signatures for high‑value items.
Law enforcement involvement matters, but so does reducing opportunity and increasing social cost for offenders. A calm, organized response protects property and preserves neighborhood trust.
Poem.
Boxes vanish like small promises,
left on the porch like quiet trust.
We call the number, speak the facts,
and wait for someone to answer the ledger.
Neighbors trade watchful glances,
install a light, a camera, a plan.
We do not want war at our door
we want our things and our peace returned.
THE INTERNET TROLL.
Article.
The troll is a social role more than a person: someone who seeks reaction by amplifying outrage. Trolls exploit attention economies and emotional triggers. Responding to them requires strategy, not fury.
- Recognize the pattern: provocation, escalation, baiting others into argument.
- Effective responses: do not feed the troll; use moderation tools; document harassment; escalate to platform reporting when threats or doxxing occur.
- Repairing the public space: cultivate norms of evidence, insist on civil language, and create spaces where nuance is rewarded over spectacle.
Digital civility is a collective project. Individual restraint plus institutional moderation reduces the troll’s power.
Poem.
A username with a sharpened grin,
typing to see the room ignite.
They toss a match into the quiet,
then watch the sparks become a fire.
We learn to close the window,
to let the wind die down.
Silence is not surrender
it is a way to keep the house.
HE OR SHE UNNECESSARILY COMBATIVE CONTINUOUSLY CONSTANT.
Article.
Chronic combativeness habitual arguing, perpetual opposition creates relational fatigue. People who are continuously combative often protect a fragile self or use conflict to feel alive. Addressing this pattern requires both boundary work and empathy.
- Identify the function: is the combativeness defensive, performative, or instrumental?
- Set limits: refuse to engage in escalation cycles; use timeouts and topic bans when necessary.
- Offer alternatives: invite structured debate, set rules for disagreement, and model calm curiosity.
When combativeness is a pattern, consequences must be consistent. Repair is possible when the combative person can see the cost of their behavior and has tools to change.
Poem.
Always the first to strike a match,
always the one to fan the flame.
Words like flint, striking for the spark,
never for the warmth that follows.
We learn to step back, to name the pattern,
to hold a hand out, not a shield.
If you want to be heard, lower the volume
let the room remember how to listen.
OVERCOME ADVERSITY.
Article.
Overcoming adversity is not a single act of will but a sequence of practices that rebuild capacity. Resilience is cultivated through routines, relationships, and meaning.
- Practical pillars: stabilize basics (sleep, food, shelter), create micro‑wins, seek social support, and reframe setbacks as data.
- Cognitive tools: narrative reframing, problem decomposition, and realistic optimism.
- Structural supports: access to resources, mentorship, and institutional safety nets.
Adversity is universal; recovery is particular. The work is to design a path that honors loss, leverages strengths, and creates a forward trajectory.
Poem.
You stand at the river’s edge, stones slick and cold,
the current loud with what you lost.
Step by step, you test the stones,
find the ones that hold your weight.
A hand reaches out, a rope, a song
small things that add until you cross.
Adversity is not the end of the map;
it redraws the route you take.

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