The Wanton’s Lament ©️

I was born in a valley that never forgets a voice. Every cry, every prayer, every lie—it all settles into the folds of the mountain. My mama used to say, a woman’s heart ain’t her own till she’s too tired to use it, and I think she was right. I learned early that love and pain came from the same hand, that men could bruise you without meaning to and still say your name like it was a promise.

When I got pregnant the first time, I thought I’d finally found what women like me were built for: a man to stay, a child to hold, a place in a story bigger than my own. But he left, and the house filled up with ghosts of what could’ve been. The silence grew teeth. Meth found its way into my bloodstream like mercy disguised as lightning. It made me weightless, careless, quick. For a while, I believed I was flying. But meth don’t lift you—it digs. It hollows.

When they took my baby, I didn’t fight. The woman from the county had kind eyes, and that made it worse. She called me sweetheart as she buckled my daughter into a seat that wasn’t mine. I watched them drive away until the dust turned the road into smoke. After that, I didn’t need much of anything. Just a place to sleep, a way to stay numb, and enough money to make it to the next day. The men came, and I let them. It was easier that way. Call it survival, call it sin—it all paid the same.

But once—just once—there was a man who looked at me different. Not hungry, not pitying, just seeing. We didn’t talk much. He touched me like he was afraid I’d disappear, and for a few hours I believed I could start again. I let him all the way in because I wanted to keep a piece of that gentleness, something living. When he was gone by morning, I didn’t cry. I just lay there watching the light move across the ceiling, thinking maybe that was how love was meant to come for women like me—brief as a breath, gone before it could rot.

Now the nights stretch long and slow. I walk the edge of town where the neon hums and the road smells of rain and oil. I still see his eyes sometimes when I close mine, that quiet steadiness like he saw the woman I was when the mountain took me. I carry that look like a small ember in my chest. It don’t light the dark, but it keeps me from freezing all the way through.

Reality Show ©️

They don’t meet on Tinder. They’re summoned.

It’s not a dating app. It’s an altar. A digital shrine pulsing with hunger, swiping left and right like some nervous priest flicking through omens. Most don’t realize it, but the profiles aren’t introductions—they’re incantations. Carefully chosen filters, rituals of cropping, bios compressed into sigils of personality. “Loves hiking and sushi” isn’t just small talk—it’s code, a totem worn by the ego to mask the yawning void behind it. Tinder isn’t trying to connect people. It’s trying to complete them in the way two opposing demons might complete a blood rite.

This isn’t love. It’s alchemy gone wrong.

The cult of Tinder doesn’t worship romance; it exalts the self through destruction of the other. Ghosting is a sacrament. Love bombing is initiation. Blocking is excommunication. The matches are hollow because they’re not matches at all—they’re reflections, mirrored illusions that crack the moment you try to touch them. Tinder teaches you to become the algorithm’s idea of a person, which is to say: beautiful, dead-eyed, and transactional. You’re not finding someone to love. You’re finding someone to feel less alone with for fifteen minutes, then never speak to again.

The grief comes not from rejection. It comes from the slow corrosion of meaning. People become thumbnails. Conversation becomes a form of advertisement. You’re not being known—you’re being consumed. Every flirtation is a battle between two narcissisms. Every hookup is a forgetting.

Most men on Tinder are drowning in desperation. Most women are suffocating in entitlement. Each thinks the other is the poison, and in a way they’re both right—but only because they’ve been shaped by the same dark god. They’re worshippers of the same altar of appearances, status, and fleeting dopamine.

The cult doesn’t have robes or chants. It has notifications. Rituals are performed with the thumb. The high priest is the algorithm. And the sacrificial lamb is intimacy.

There was a time when love was discovered slowly, awkwardly, like a candle being lit in a cavern. Now it’s pixelated, gamified, reduced to a dopamine economy that bankrupts the soul. And the worst part? Most of the people inside the cult know it. But they stay. Because the illusion of potential is more comforting than the reality of solitude. They’d rather suffer shallow connections than endure the terrifying possibility of going deep with someone who might actually matter.

Tinder isn’t broken. It’s working perfectly—for what it was built to do. Which is not to help you love, but to never love fully again.

So when you swipe, ask yourself this: Is this a person, or is this the app speaking through a mask?

Because in the cult of Tinder, there are no lovers—only ghosts in the machine, waiting to haunt you.

How Black Privilege Became the New Plantation ©️

If a black individual complains about “white privilege”—claiming it is unjust, corrosive, and demoralizing—and then turns around and belittles others using their own “black privilege”, they are not fighting for equality.

They are fighting for the right to play the same sick game they claimed to despise.

It is not about justice for them.

It is not about dignity.

It is not about repairing history.

It is about trading places with the old master, not ending the plantation.

When someone claims that “white privilege” is wrong because it elevates some by birthright and excludes others by blood, they are standing on moral ground.

But the moment they use “black privilege” as a weapon to belittle, dominate, or shame others, they abandon the high ground.

They become the very force they said they hated.

Privilege is not evil because of the color attached to it.

Privilege is evil when it creates a world where worth is determined by ancestry instead of character.

Thus:

If you complain about privilege and then wield your own racial privilege as a sword, you were never seeking equality.

You were seeking advantage.

You were never against injustice.

You were against not having the whip in your hand.

You cannot build a better world by flipping the chains from one neck to another.

You cannot heal old wounds by creating new ones.

If you truly believe privilege by birth is wrong, then it is wrong no matter whose hand holds it.

Anything else is hypocrisy in blackface.

And it is cowardice of the highest order—because it demands the crown without the burden, the applause without the responsibility, the victory without the price.

Final line kill shot:

If you hated white privilege for how it crushed you, but now you love black privilege for how it lifts you, then you never hated injustice—you just hated losing.