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Friday, November 28, 2025

Whatever Happened to the Love in Christmas?

Remember when Christmas used to mean something? When Jesus was the reason for the season? When the tree wasn’t just an Instagram backdrop, the dinner table wasn’t full of faces lit by phone screens, and the joy of the season wasn’t measured by how many Amazon boxes showed up on the porch? Somewhere between Rudolph and reality TV, Christmas lost its love—and we all just shrugged and scrolled on by. 


πŸŽ„ From Charlie Brown to Cheap Laughs

Once upon a time, families would gather around the TV for animated Christmas specials that actually taught something. You didn’t have to be religious to feel the warmth of A Charlie Brown Christmas or Frosty the Snowman. These shows displayed love, meaning, and a sense of togetherness.

Now? Those heartfelt classics are being replaced by celebrity game shows and Christmas “competitions.” Instead of teaching kindness or gratitude, we’re watching who can stack the tallest gingerbread tower or guess the most holiday songs for cash. Nothing says “holiday spirit” like contestants fighting over prizes while commercials remind you to spend more money you don’t have.

πŸ’° Capitalism in a Santa Suit

The holidays used to be about love, reflection, and family. Now it’s about “doorbusters,” “limited drops,” and “buy now, pay later.” Christmas has been hijacked by capitalism in a red velvet suit. It’s no longer a celebration—it’s a sales event.

Black Friday used to be the day after Thanksgiving. Now it’s the week month before. Christmas decorations are in stores before Halloween candy even goes on clearance. And let’s be honest: most people are stressing over how much they have to buy instead of who they’re buying for.

Every year, millions of people go deeper into debt just to “make Christmas special.” But how special can it be when the bills hit in January and the joy turns into anxiety?

πŸ“± The Death of Family Time

Family dinners used to be the centerpiece of the holidays. Now, it’s an exercise in silence—everyone sitting around the table scrolling through TikTok, pretending to be present while mentally somewhere else.

Even watching Christmas movies together has turned into individual screen time. One person’s watching Elf on Netflix, another’s on YouTube watching gift hauls, and someone else is deep in a group chat. The TV used to bring people together. Now, every screen pulls us apart.

🏠 The Divided Christmas

For many blended families, Christmas is a scheduling nightmare. Kids are shuttled from one parent’s house to another like packages in transit. Half of Christmas morning is spent packing, not playing. Everyone’s trying to make the most of their “time,” but it’s hard to find peace when the calendar feels like a custody battle.

It’s not anyone’s fault—life changes, families evolve—but it’s sad that the magic of togetherness often gets lost in the logistics.

🎁 The Entitlement Era

Kids today are growing up in a world where gifts show up all year long—birthdays, random “surprises,” TikTok trends, and “back to school hauls.” So when Christmas rolls around, it’s just another day of unboxing.

When every day feels like Christmas, Christmas stops feeling special. And when gifts become expectations instead of blessings, gratitude gets buried under wrapping paper.


πŸ’” The Hard Truth

The holidays were supposed to bring joy, peace, and love. But now they bring pressure, debt, and disconnection. People are chasing the “perfect Christmas” for the wrong reasons—more likes, better photos, flashier gifts.

Meanwhile, the real spirit of the season—love, gratitude, forgiveness, and family—is quietly fading.

Maybe it’s time to unplug, slow down, and find that spirit again. Because Christmas doesn’t live in store shelves or social media posts—it lives in people. And until we start acting like it, we’ll keep losing the love that made the season worth celebrating in the first place.

Christmas used to fill hearts. Now it fills credit card statements. Let’s change that before it’s too late.


(Happy 19th birthday to my wonderful god daughter, Erin.)

(Happy 33rd anniversary to my brother and his wife.)


Tuesday, November 25, 2025

We Don’t Argue Anymore—We Perform

Remember when a disagreement was just that—a disagreement? Two people, maybe more, hashing things out over coffee, a kitchen table, or a group text that hadn’t yet turned into a battleground. Back then, the goal was clarity. Understanding. Maybe even compromise. Now? Every disagreement feels like a dress rehearsal for a TED Talk nobody asked for.

We’re not debating to understand—we’re auditioning for validation.

Scroll through any comment section and you’ll see it: folks aren’t trying to make sense, they’re trying to make noise. Every podcast clip, every stitched reaction, every “hot take” is less about truth and more about applause. It’s not “What do you think?” anymore—it’s “Watch me win.” 

We used to argue to sharpen ideas. Now we argue to trend.

And let’s be honest: it’s not about being right—it’s about being seen as right. The loudest voice usually wins, not the wisest one. The algorithm doesn’t reward nuance. It rewards volume. Certainty. Swagger. Even if it’s the dumbest thing anyone has ever seen, heard, or read.

But here’s the thing: strong thinkers don’t need an audience to be right.

They don’t need likes, shares, or followers to make sense. What they need is logic, patience, and humility—the kind of qualities that don’t get you clicks but do earn you respect. The kind of mindset that says, “I’m here to learn, not just to be heard.”

Real maturity shows up when you care more about understanding than winning. At one time understanding was the goal, right?

When you listen without rehearsing your rebuttal. When you can say, “You might have a point,” instead of “You just don’t get it.” That’s grown-folk energy, Church. That’s the kind of conversation that builds bridges instead of burning them.

Because grown folks don’t perform—they process. They listen to gain perspective. 

They don’t argue for show—they discuss for growth. They know that being loud isn’t the same as being clear. That being viral isn’t the same as being valuable.

We just have to start listening again. Not for the applause. Not for the retweets. But for the kind of understanding that doesn’t trend—but lasts. Viral is temporary. Value is forever.

Tuesday, November 18, 2025

No One’s Coming to Save You (And That’s a Good Thing)

Let’s go ahead and rip the Band-Aid off: No one is obligated to rescue you from the chaos that you have created. 

I know, I know. That sounds harsh and the ladies will hate me after this post. But if you’re here for sugarcoating, you’re on the wrong blog. This is Thank, Q for Common Sense, where I serve reality straight up with no chaser. Just the bitter truth. I'm a life referee and I call it like I see it.

🧹 A Man Is Not Your Mop

There’s a troubling trend I keep seeing among women and it’s time we talk about it. It’s this fantasy that a man is supposed to be the human equivalent of a clean-up crew. Not just Prince Charming, but Prince CPA, Prince Therapist, Prince Financial Planner, and Prince Super-Stepdad. All rolled into one.

Let me be crystal clear: That’s not a partner. That’s a professional life manager. And guess what? They don’t come free, and they’re not signing up to be shackled to your unresolved mess.

It's time that ladies reclaim a partnership with men instead of a transactional one. If you feel like you deserve to have a certain dollar amount spent on you for dinner, then be a professional escort. But if you're truly looking for a significant other, then your focus should be on what kind of guy he is and not what he can spend on you.

🚨 Your Chaos, Your Chore

I’m talking about the women who are drowning in debt, have no clear career path, and are lugging around emotional baggage like it’s designer luggage. Yet they’re out here dating with the unspoken expectation that a man will swoop in and stabilize their lives.

Wanting a partner who’s financially responsible and emotionally mature? There's absolutely nothing wrong with that. That’s called having standards. Expecting him to fix your finances or parent your kids just because he’s dating you? That’s called manipulation and entitlement.

Let’s break it down:

  • πŸ’³ Your Debt Is Yours: If you’ve racked up $20K in credit card debt, that’s your tab. Expecting a man to pay it off isn’t romantic—it’s transactional. He’s not your ATM with abs.

  • πŸ‘ΆπŸΎ Your Kids, Your Responsibility: If you’re a parent, that’s your primary job. A good man will respect your children, maybe even love them—but “stepdad” isn’t a title you assign on Date #2. It’s earned, not assumed. He doesn't owe your kids jack until something real has been established.

🧠 The “Rescue Me” Mentality Is a Trap

Here’s the real kicker: this mindset doesn’t just burden men—it keeps women stuck.

When you’re always looking for someone else to fix your life, you give away your power. You become passive, dependent, and ultimately unattractive—not because you have problems, but because you refuse to own them. Guys are natural fixers, but we hate having problems thrown in our faces. Especially from someone who only creates more without solving previous concerns.

But when you bring calm to your chaos? You meet a partner on equal footing. You’re not a project. You’re a whole person. And that’s sexy. That's someone a guy can partner with to get some things done.

πŸ› ️ Common Sense Call to Action

Let’s put it like this:

  • 🏑 Get Your House in Order: Before you go looking for love, get your finances straight. Go to therapy. Build a life you’re proud of—one that doesn’t need rescuing.

  • 🀝 Date a Partner, Not a Provider: Find someone who complements your life, not someone who’s expected to sustain it. A partner adds value—they don’t fill a void.

  • πŸ’πŸ½‍♀️ Offer Substance, Not a Project: A woman who’s handling her business isn’t intimidating—she’s irresistible. She says, “I don’t need your resources, but I want your partnership.” That’s power. That's what attracts men who have careers and deters boys who have a PS5 addiction.

Because here’s the truth: Two stable people build a stable relationship. Two half-people just build a mess.

So take the wheel and realize that you’re the hero you’ve been waiting for. You are the solver of your problems. Once you accept your mission then it's all downhill from there. But you have to own it!

What do you think? Have you seen this “rescue me” mindset play out in real life? Drop your thoughts in the comments—let’s talk about it.

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