Wednesday, 30 April 2025

Metal window, emf stopper--> finally had a good sleep, with an unobliterated day. In other news waiting for the world to drop post apagado

 "The feminine cannot, will not surrender




































To the wounded masculine...
A man who criticizes her
Belittles
Dishonours
Controls
Manipulates
Abuses
Or attacks her
Her own inner masculine will not allow it
He will rise fiercely to the forefront
To stand guard
To do the job himself
The feminine can and will only surrender
To the divine masculine...
A man who is devoted to her
Elevates
Honours
Cherishes
Supports
And protects her
A man with boundaries
Presence
Direction
Integrity
Accountability
And humility
In this space
She will feel him penetrating her very essence...
Her body
Her mind
Her heart
Her soul
And she will feel safe...
Safe enough to surrender
This is the natural law
This is the dance of healed polarities
This is surrender...
To Love"
Written by Gemma Star




II

My next relationship? Oh, we’re having a weekly sit-down, period. Once a week, no phones, no distractions—just me and you, face-to-face, heart-to-heart. We’re gonna talk about US. How we’ve been feeling, what’s going good, what needs work, what we both need more of, and what we should stop doing. Because too many relationships fail from lack of communication, and I’m not letting that happen again.
We’re going to normalize checking in—emotionally, mentally, spiritually, and even physically. We’re going to ask each other, “How can I love you better this week?” “What did I do that made you feel unheard?” “What can we work on as a team?” Because love isn’t just about the good times—it’s about growth, understanding, accountability, and effort.
I want us to be intentional. I want us to build something that’s unshakable. And you’d be surprised what just one real conversation a week can do for a relationship. It’s not about being perfect—it’s about being present. Together. For real.


Tuesday, 29 April 2025

The anger of champ reflection/never letitngt his happen again

 I read Jancee Dunn's book the night after I'd hidden in the bathroom, silently sobbing into a towel so I wouldn't wake the baby—or my husband, who was sleeping through his third consecutive night shift that I was somehow pulling alone, despite us both working full-time. I wasn't crying from exhaustion. I was crying because I had just calculated how much child support he'd have to pay if I left him.

This isn't a book. It's a goddamn mirror reflecting the darkest thoughts of every mother who's ever fantasized about abandoning her family at 3AM, not because she doesn't love them, but because she's drowning and her partner is standing on the shore checking his phone.
1. The Maternal Rage You Feel Isn't Mental Illness—It's Mathematics
Dunn ruthlessly quantifies what most parenting books politely ignore: the raw numerical inequality of modern parenthood. When she tracks hours spent on childcare (her: 35 weekly, him: 9) while both work full-time, it's not anecdotal—it's violence. The liberation comes in recognizing your homicidal thoughts aren't hormonal or "crazy"—they're the rational response to systemic theft of your time, sleep, and identity while someone who claims to love you watches from the sidelines.
2. The "Mental Load" Isn't Just Unfair—It's Killing You Cell by Cell
What devastated me wasn't just Dunn's account of doing everything—it was her scientific exploration of what invisible labor does to a woman's brain and body. The constant vigilance of tracking every family need doesn't just make you tired—it restructures neural pathways, elevates cortisol, and accelerates aging. When her doctor finds her blood pressure dangerously high while her husband's remains perfect despite their supposedly "shared" stress, the physiological consequences of inequality are laid bare. You're not imagining it—this imbalance is literally shortening your life.
3. Your Husband Isn't Just Annoying—He's Been Systematically Trained to Disable You
The book's most chilling insight comes when Dunn investigates how her competent, intelligent husband develops "strategic incompetence" around domestic tasks. Her research reveals it's not accidental—it's subconscious warfare honed through generations of male socialization. The weaponized helplessness ("Where does this go?"), the learned blindness to mess, the performance of bumbling assistance—these aren't personality quirks but sophisticated tactics to maintain privilege while appearing supportive. I'll never hear "just tell me what needs done" the same way again.
4. The Fights You're Having Aren't About Chores—They're About Human Worth
Dunn's epiphany comes not in cataloging tasks but in recognizing the existential question beneath them: whose time and peace matter? When her husband unthinkingly preserves his exercise routine while she hasn't showered in days, when he sleeps through night wakings because he "has work" (as though she doesn't), when he requires praise for basic parenting—the underlying message is that his humanity outranks hers. This reframing transformed how I understood my own marriage's breaking points.
5. You're Not Control-Freaking—You're Preventing Catastrophe
The section that left me breathless was Dunn's dissection of "maternal gatekeeping." Her therapist suggests she's "not letting go" of child-rearing tasks—until she documents the actual consequences of her husband's cavalier parenting: a toddler left in soiled clothes for hours, forgotten medications, a child nearly hit by a car while dad texts. The gut-punch: sometimes the "perfectionist mom" narrative masks legitimate terror of what happens when the backup system fails. I've never felt more vindicated about my inability to "just relax."
6. Romance After Children Requires Blood Sacrifice—Usually Yours
Dunn's unflinching examination of post-baby intimacy problems goes beyond fatigue to something darker: the resentment poisoning attraction. Her account of faking interest while mentally calculating how many hours of sleep she's losing made me physically flinch with recognition. The breakthrough comes not through date nights or lingerie but through radical redistribution of invisible labor. Her documentation of how performing oral sex feels easier than asking for help with dishes exposes how parenthood turns sex into another form of female emotional labor.
7. The Solutions Aren't Cute—They're Nuclear
What elevates this beyond primal-scream therapy is Dunn's scorched-earth approach to reconstruction. She brings in hostage negotiators. Corporate efficiency experts. Therapists who specialize in high-conflict divorce. The message is clear: half-measures will fail. Her implementation of NASA's black box system for critical communication during arguments saved not just her marriage but possibly her husband's life. This isn't about better chore charts—it's about dismantling and rebuilding the entire operational system of your relationship.
This book should be handed to every couple in the delivery room, not as celebration but as warning. Dunn doesn't offer gentle suggestions for reconnecting with your spouse—she offers battlefield triage for the psychological trauma that parenthood inflicts on females and marriages.




Friday, 25 April 2025

Blocking the water meters.

 1. Love Shouldn’t Cost You Yourself: There’s a line she repeats—“You are not the hero of their story.” That line alone snapped something back into place for me. I had been exhausting myself trying to save, fix, or rescue others, thinking that was love. But Lysa gently insists: real love doesn’t require self-destruction. If being “there for them” means abandoning yourself, that’s not love—it’s codependency. This lesson was permission to step back without guilt. For anyone tangled in a draining relationship, this message will feel like oxygen.

2. Boundaries Aren’t Meant to Push People Away—They’re Meant to Keep Love Safe: Lysa paints boundaries not as walls, but as doors with locks—ways to protect what’s sacred. I’d always felt like boundaries were a form of rejection. But listening to her reframe them as loving limits made me realize: boundaries preserve connection, not sever it. The way she breaks this down makes it so clear—if you want your love to be sustainable, it has to be structured. That structure comes from healthy boundaries.
3. Biblical Truth Doesn’t Equal Emotional Passivity: One of the most powerful moments was when she wove in Scripture—not to guilt-trip, but to illuminate. She showed how even Jesus walked away from toxic situations. He loved people, but he didn’t let manipulation drive his decisions. As someone who grew up in church settings that glorified self-sacrifice to unhealthy degrees, hearing Lysa say “It’s not un-Christian to say goodbye” was a deep relief. This lesson gives you both spiritual and emotional permission to protect your peace.
4. You Teach People How to Treat You by What You Allow: This one stung a little—in the best way. Lysa says that by continuing to tolerate hurtful behavior, you unintentionally train people that it’s okay. That realization stopped me cold. Listening to her unpack this made me reflect: What have I been permitting in silence? What have I endured out of fear of rocking the boat? She challenged me to change the story by first changing my responses. And it’s a challenge I needed.
5. Saying Goodbye Doesn’t Mean You Failed: There’s a chapter where she talks about her own painful goodbyes, and she says something like, “Sometimes, love says, ‘This can’t continue.’” Hearing that in her voice—full of grace and sorrow—hit differently. Goodbyes don’t always mean bitterness or anger. Sometimes, they’re the bravest act of love. This lesson helped me release the guilt I’d been carrying and replace it with peace.
6. Boundaries Without Consequences Are Just Suggestions: This one made me pause and rewind. Lysa talks about how we often state boundaries but never enforce them. And then we’re surprised when people don’t take them seriously. She drove it home by saying: “A boundary that’s not enforced is just a hope.” That shook me. If I want people to honor my limits, I have to honor them first by standing firm. It taught me to stop making empty threats and start following through—kindly, clearly, consistently.
7. Not Everyone Deserves Full Access to You: This might be the lesson that stuck with me the most. We think that being kind means being constantly available. But Lysa challenges that. She encourages us to think of our emotional space like a house—not everyone should be allowed past the front porch. That visual helped me. It gave me language and imagery to restructure the way I invite (or block) people into my life. For those who feel guilty for pulling back, this lesson gives a new way to understand emotional boundaries.
8. Healing Isn’t Instant—but It Starts With One Healthy Step: She doesn’t offer quick fixes. And honestly, I’m grateful. Lysa admits that healing from relational pain takes time. She talks about grief, loss, and the temptation to give up. But she also reminds you: you’re stronger than you think, and you’re allowed to take your time. This final lesson grounded me. It reminded me that I’m not behind. I’m not broken. I’m just becoming more whole, one boundary at a time.
Book/Audiobook: https://amzn.to/3RqHCk1





Friday, 18 April 2025

John's comming/ lennie Deux ( must go to les puces one day)

 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1EftZvRGquA





Easter wind down. Now if only I had a van " to go"/ Avoiding crumbs and champers.

https://threadreaderapp.com/thread/1913273417912168892.html?utm_campaign=topunroll 



Mars returns to Leo, the sign where it began its retrograde way back on December 6. It's a revisit of themes from January as well as November 2024. After a long reevaluation of our wants and needs, power and desires, we're stepping into new inspirations.

As I've been saying in my weekly video, 2025 can roughly be divided into three parts. The first runs from the beginning of the year to the end of May. The second follows June through August. The final chapter starts at the end of August and takes us into 2026.
Mars is the dominant energy in this first part of the year. Between Mars Retrograde and Direct and the Aries solar eclipse, Mars sets the rhythm and focuses the energy over a six month period. But it's really Mars's opposition to Pluto that is the defining aspect of this first half.
Mars opposite Pluto is one of the more intense aspects to navigate in astrology. And while I don't believe that there are "good" or "bad" aspects in astrology, we still have to see Pluto for what it is — a non-negotiable demand for change.
Pluto holds a mirror to us and our Mars. It makes us look at our relationship with power and control. It reveals what has been hidden, rejected. It shows our true motivations, even if the realization is uncomfortable. It helps us to refind our courage. It clears the emotional and psychic landscape with a volcanic intensity. Herein lies the alchemy of change.
In its highest expression, Pluto helps us to find the consciousness, turning shadows into light, lead into gold.
Next week's final opposition between Mars and Pluto on April 26 shouldn't be underestimated. And yet we have already been navigating its energy since last November. Something has shifted within. Now we will need to live it externally.


Pluto in Aquarius: Sign by Sign

Regardless, it’s the start of a new era, one that will pick up on notes as well as lessons from Saturn’s time in Aquarius from 2020-2023. Pluto will make its final entry into Aquarius on November 19, 2024, remaining until 2044.

Read Pluto in Aquarius: Transforming Humanity for a deeper dive into this new era.


Aquarius or Aquarius Rising — Major new beginnings, restructure, rebirth, power, individuation. It’s hard to underestimate Pluto’s power in your sign over the coming years. Its arrival in Aquarius marks a major change of seasons, one that may have been foreshadowed by Saturn’s time in Aquarius from 2020-2023. This is the start of a transformative new chapter, one that will unfold differently for every Aquarius. It all depends on your relationship with power and control. For some, Pluto’s revealing where you can no longer resist necessary changes and reformations. For others, it’s a time to step into Pluto’s energy, which can transform your life and how you take the lead and connect with others. Either way, the person you will become over the coming years will be unlike anything you are now.


Mars in Leo: Sign by Sign

Mars will be in Leo from November 3, 2024 to January 6, 2025 and April 18 to June 17, 2025.


Aquarius or Aquarius Rising — Relationships, other people. Mars moving into your relationship sign of Leo will put the heat on your one-on-one connections in life. You may feel motivated to connect with a partner or meet someone new or you may find yourself having to go on the defensive with someone you know. Mars will inspired action and change.




Sunday, 6 April 2025

Lamentations: sychro creative sunday. " They need to communicate wih me"

 Aquarius

You are used to observing connection through the lens of logic, but this time, something softer is pulling you in. Venus trine Mars is awakening a new level of emotional awareness, one that feels both unexpected and necessary. A relationship may evolve past surface understanding into shared emotional space. You are realizing that intellect alone cannot hold intimacy. You need warmth, touch, and vulnerability too. A conversation may open the door to this shift. Listen with your body as much as your mind. In love, you may find yourself ready to be known on a deeper level than you once allowed. Friendship also carries more weight now. Someone who sees your full self, even the parts you keep behind ideas, may reveal their presence more clearly. Family interactions may ask for less distance and more honesty. You are beginning to see that emotional openness does not weaken you. Venus and Mars are helping you stay connected while still honoring your individuality. You do not need to give everything at once. Just let someone in, one layer at a time. Love can be expansive, thoughtful, and emotionally alive. That is what your spirit is craving most now.