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.

A Gospel in Leather ©️

You don’t choose to be me. Life grabs you by the throat, beats the softness outta you, and what’s left—that’s Rip. You want to wear my boots? Then get ready to bleed in ‘em. This world don’t hand out titles. You earn ‘em with scars, and you keep ‘em by doing what no one else will.

First off—shut the hell up. Talk’s cheap and most men are bankrupt. I don’t run my mouth unless it’s got a job to do. If you need noise to feel like a man, turn around now. Me? I let the silence carry the weight. You hold a stare, keep your jaw tight, and let ‘em squirm. That’s where the truth lives.

Loyalty’s the backbone of this whole goddamn thing. You don’t flinch, don’t hedge, don’t hedge your bets. You pick your people and you stay picked. If it means breakin’ the law, fine. If it means breakin’ your own heart, so be it. Loyalty don’t come with conditions, and it sure as hell don’t come with apologies.

Now here’s where it gets real: you do what the fuck needs doing. Doesn’t matter if it’s ugly, if it makes you hated, or if you gotta wash your hands in gasoline to get the blood off. When the job calls, you answer. You dig the hole. You load the truck. You make the body disappear. And you don’t look back.

You want to know about love? You love hard. Brutal. Unapologetic. You don’t play cute. You don’t fuck around. You find the one thing in this world that softens you—and you protect it like it’s the last goddamn light in a storm. And if someone threatens it? You don’t call the cops. You handle it with your own two hands.

And here’s the part no one likes hearing: you don’t get peace. You get purpose. You get weight. You get up every morning with blood in your mouth and fire in your gut, and you ride out like the devil’s on your heels. And when you lay down at night, ain’t nobody clappin’ for you. But you’ll sleep like a man who don’t owe the world a goddamn thing.

Last thing—don’t betray your fuckin’ self. Not for a woman, not for a boss, not for comfort, not even for God. Your gut knows what’s right before your head starts making excuses. Trust it. Every time. And when it’s time to act—you don’t hesitate. You ride. You hit. You bury. You burn.

If you can’t live that way—if that sounds too cold, too cruel, too goddamn lonely—then take off the hat, hang up the iron, and go home.

Because Rip Wheeler don’t half-ass a goddamn thing.

Exit Left ©

They thought I was still there. Still orbiting the petty suns they’d lit for themselves. Still answering to invisible chains disguised as procedure. Still carrying the weight they refused to name. But I had already withdrawn my gravity. I had already let them drift.

It wasn’t sudden. Collapse rarely is. It happens in layers — in moments where the air goes still, where the light above the cubicle flickers not from electricity but from indifference. They whispered accusations, coded and quiet, meant to trap me in reaction. But I’d stopped responding to bait. When you’ve tasted what silence can do, you don’t raise your voice anymore — you vanish deeper into the still.

I saw the cracks in their machine long ago. Not just incompetence. Entropy. The kind that seeps into the gears of every synthetic hierarchy. It wasn’t corruption that bothered me — it was the mediocrity that wore it like perfume. Rot masked as policy. Weakness dressed in authority. And when they tried to pin their failures to me, it didn’t even sting. Because they couldn’t reach me. I was already gone.

I didn’t argue. I timestamped the truth. Buried it like a seed. Someone might dig it up later. Or not. That’s not my concern anymore.

Because I don’t wage war in dead systems. I don’t shout in halls built to muffle. I don’t set fires where there’s no oxygen left to burn.

I simply leave — and take the atmosphere with me.

And I watched them float — confused, weightless, still pretending their gravity was real.

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.

Juxtaposition of Souls ©️