Tag: #FunnyButTrue

  • Iphone and Emotional Intelligence

    So, I put my car in drive. Again. I’ve driven to the same destination about five times now. Maybe more. I don’t know—who’s counting?

    Well, My iPhone is.

    I start moving, and then I back up—because I’m just a thrill-seeker like that—and BAM: the familiar little chime goes off.

    “Gym is nine minutes away.”

    Every. Single. Weekday.

    (Ok, not EVERY day? But you get it)

    It’s like my iPhone gaslights me.

    “Im not following your every move, you’re just paranoid.” It knows. It knows when I leave the house. Worse yet, I think it knows I know. (But I also know it knows I know).

    Sundays it whispers, “Church, 13 minutes”, like it’s trying to gently nudge me toward salvation. Other days it nudges me toward capitalism:

    “Office, 11 minutes.”

    And if I’m feeling in need of overpriced snacks:

    “Gas station, four minutes.”

    So what does this say about the iPhone? More importantly, what does this say about me, a supposedly evolved and deeply complex human being with a fully developed prefrontal cortex (let’s hope)?

    It says… my phone learns faster than I do.

    My iPhone doesn’t need a life coach, a therapist, or a hundred repetitions of the same bad idea before it goes, “Hey, this is a pattern.”

    Meanwhile, I’m over here needing a divine intervention and disabling guilt to acknowledge, “Oh, maybe I do this a lot.”

    But here’s the thing: the iPhone doesn’t have feelings. It doesn’t wake up and re-think, “I don’t feel like going to the gym. Maybe today’s a bakery day.”

    Nope. It doesn’t negotiate. Doesn’t justify. Doesn’t self-sabotage.

    It doesn’t wonder if the treadmill is judging it or if the shirt it’s wearing was actually washed (clean and dirty clothes getting awfully close to one another).

    It just sees routine, data, habits. Predicts and then Executes.

    So again, why don’t I learn like an iPhone? Why do I need the same lesson 30, 40, 184 times before it even occurs to me that maybe, just maybe, this is a bad idea?

    Here’s where I stand: good habits are boring, and bad habits are spicy.

    Take doughnuts, for instance. I didn’t need 40 tries to decide I liked doughnuts. That lesson was locked in immediately.

    Ask my mother—she has the smashed-cake baby photos to prove it.

    My daughter? My nephew? One doughnut and they’re in a committed relationship.

    But that same reward system? It works a little too well with gossip. Or swearing. Or skipping leg day.

    Somewhere, somehow, there’s a reward hiding in these less-than-ideal behaviors. A tiny hit of dopamine, a splash of excitement, rebellion even.

    So maybe the real issue isn’t just stopping the bad—it’s finding something good instead.

    Because if “gym” is less rewarding than “bakery,” well then, I can’t exactly trust my feelings, can I?

    My internal compass is calibrated to pleasure, but maybe the compass is a little… off.

    Which brings me to the haunting question:

    How many tiny, subpar decisions am I making every day that are driven by the lower, pleasurable me, versus the ideal gym-goer my iPhone might think I am. (Or at least, think that I think I am).

    Not the huge, dramatic habits—the little ones. The ones that snowball. The ones that come with a side of guilt.

    How many times does it take to change a behavior?

    Thirty?

    Forty?

    Or do I just need to become more like my iPhone?

    Because honestly… my iPhone figured it out in five.

  • 4:58 AM

    4:58 AM

    4:58 AM, Driving, and the Revelation
    Why driving to the gym turned into a full-blown spiritual awakening (with carbs).

    It’s 4:58 AM. Driving to the gym. Enough pre-workout in my stomach and english muffin in my gut to fuel a baby elephant.

    Then—right there between two changing lights, accelerating and then decelerating because someone decided to time the lights that way—I have a thought:
    “Why do I seek attention from people when I’m actually pretty content being alone?”

    Going to the gym always gives me anxiety because I become painfully aware mid-squat there are other people in here, am I doing this workout good enough?

    Ah yes, an all-too familiar beginning of every great mental spiral.

    For a fleeting, smug second, I think I’ve achieved enlightenment. I’ve transcended the need for external validation. Why Am I going to the gym, I am in no need of “bettering” myself. I am a lone wolf, a peaceful monk in small shorts, the Dalai Lama of the road right now.

    But then the second punch of a one-two combo… floors me.

    What if I don’t seek attention because I’m “over it”—what if I avoid it because I’m afraid of rejection?
    What if I’ve just become a professional emotional gymnast, doing quiet backflips to stay liked, relevant, and never, ever left out?

    Wait, is that what I am doing here, right now?

    Cue: Deep thoughts. Mirror glances. Internal debates that sound like two Jr. high kids trying to get an A in speech class.

    “Well you just want people’s attention”

    “Nu-uh”

    “Uh huh”

    It’s all in the Dough.

    There’s cheap bread—$1.78 white fluff. It’s fast. It’s easy. It tastes great for six seconds.
    Then there’s the $6 sprouted grain, sourdough, rustic spiritual metaphor bread. Hard to chew. Takes time. Might change your life.

    The actions might look the same—going to the gym, being nice, dressing up—but why do I do these things? Am I living from a place of wholeness? Or just baking my self-worth in other people’s approval ovens?

    And the, because it was Good Friday, Jesus shows up in the metaphorical bakery:
    “The world will hate you because of me.”

    Brain, please. It is not even 5 AM.

    But also… you got me there. You can’t follow Christ and be everyone’s favorite. Not forever. Eventually, the values split. The applause fades. The unsubscribe buttons get pressed.

    And that’s where rejection becomes not a curse, but a reminder. It reveals where we anchor our worth. Are we in the world instead of eternity?

    So now, foot on the accelerator, I realize:

    • It’s not about if rejection happens.
    • It’s about when it does—who am I really living for?

    Conclusion:
    If I’m going to be misunderstood, misread, or mildly unpopular, let it be because I chose truth over trend. My soul over spotlight. Jesus over clout.

    And if it takes a few extra seconds stopping at every traffic light between my house and the YMCA and a loaf of overpriced bread to remind me of that?

    Worth it.


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