Just Heart ©️

Good morning, Cicely.

There are some journeys we take alone. Not by choice, but by storm. Life has a funny way of rerouting the road just when you think you know the map. And suddenly, you’re not the person you thought you were going to be.

You’re not the golden boy anymore.

Not the rising star.

Not the dreamer with the straight path and the perfect arc.

You’re something else entirely.

You’re someone who went through it. And I mean really went through it.

I’ve spent time in places people whisper about—psych wards, jail cells, corners of the mind where the lights flicker and nothing makes sense. I’ve lost years to silence, confusion, and pain. I’ve watched dreams get shattered like glass on stone, and had to pick up the pieces with shaking hands.

There were nights no one called. Days no one knew where I was. Times even I didn’t know who I was.

And still… somehow… I’m here.

My family didn’t always understand. How could they? Mental illness doesn’t come with instructions. It doesn’t wear a name tag. It doesn’t sit politely in the corner. But even in the dark, they loved me. Fiercely. Imperfectly. Consistently. And I owe them everything.

There was a love once—a young one. One of those first-flame, heart-open, foolish-and-forever kind of things. I let it slip away. Maybe I ran. Maybe I wasn’t ready. Maybe I didn’t believe I deserved it. And I’ve never found that kind of depth again. That’s a ghost I carry. Not with bitterness, just with a quiet what if.

I never had children. And maybe I never will. That used to haunt me. But lately… I’ve started to see things differently.

Because while I may not be a father, I’ve become something else. Something I never thought I could be.

I’ve become me.

Not the broken version.

Not the could’ve-been.

Just me.

Someone I trust.

Someone I’m proud to carry through this world.

This is Chris in the Morning—KBHR 570 AM—and if you’re listening, and you’ve been through the long night… just know there’s still morning. There’s still music. There’s still time.

And sometimes, surviving becomes your greatest work.

Pulp Romance ©️

Romantic love is often less about connection and more about confirmation. In a world that rarely pauses to see us fully, romantic attention can feel like the ultimate proof that we matter. It whispers that we are beautiful, worthy, important—that someone has chosen us above all others. This need for validation drives much of our pursuit of love, but it also poisons it. We mistake recognition for truth and affection for selfhood. The more we seek romantic love to affirm us, the more it slips through our hands, revealing its hollow core when built on the unstable ground of external worth.

In early stages of love, validation flows freely. We are praised, admired, studied. Our quirks are charming, our flaws forgivable. We feel elevated, not just by the other person’s love, but by what that love reflects back: you are good, you are lovable, you are enough. But this reflection is fragile—it depends on their continued approval, their continued gaze. When their love wanes, so does our sense of self. The validation we borrowed from them becomes debt. This dynamic creates a dangerous dependency: we outsource our self-worth to someone else’s perception, and when they withdraw it, we are left bankrupt.

Romantic culture fuels this cycle. From Disney films to pop music, we are taught that love is the reward for being good enough, pretty enough, special enough. We’re conditioned to believe that being loved by another person is the final stamp of approval that says we are real. This narrative is seductive and deadly. It teaches us to shape-shift, to perform, to compete. It makes love conditional, and identity unstable. The result is not intimacy, but anxiety. Not fulfillment, but fear of abandonment. We don’t fall in love—we fall into dependence, craving validation like a drug.

But there is another way. Self-validation breaks the loop. It is the practice of recognizing your own worth without the need for external reflection. It means learning to witness your life, your emotions, your dreams, and your failures with honesty and compassion. It means saying, “I am enough,” not because someone else believes it, but because you do. Self-validation is not arrogance—it is wholeness. It doesn’t reject love from others, but it refuses to be built upon it. From this place, love becomes an offering, not a need. You don’t chase connection to feel real—you share your reality because it is already solid.

To self-validate is to reclaim the mirror. It is to stop waiting for someone to tell you you’re worthy and to inscribe that truth in your own voice. It can look like journaling your thoughts without judgment, setting boundaries without guilt, honoring your desires without apology. It can be messy and slow. But it’s also sacred. Because when you stop outsourcing your worth, romantic love transforms. It no longer has to carry the impossible burden of making you whole. You already are. And from that truth, the impossible begins to dissolve, revealing something quieter, deeper, and finally—real.