Buy Yourself: The Damn Flowers
The radical shift is to decouple tenderness from transaction. When you buy yourself the flowers, you are not saying, “I don’t need anyone.” You are saying, “I will not outsource my softness.”
Over time, the flowers become mundane. And that is the goal. Not a dramatic declaration, but a quiet, unshakable baseline: Of course there are flowers here. I live here. I deserve beauty. You cannot wait for the world to treat you like you matter. The world is too busy, too distracted, too wounded. But you are here, right now, with two hands and the ability to choose. Buy Yourself the Damn Flowers
Notice what you feel. Guilt? Sadness? A strange, small thrill? All of it is data. The radical shift is to decouple tenderness from transaction
This waiting becomes a slow erosion. Each unfulfilled expectation whispers: You are not a priority. You are not worth the effort. Your joy is conditional on someone else’s action. Not a dramatic declaration, but a quiet, unshakable
The flowers on the grocery store shelf become a mirror. You glance at the peonies, then glance away. Those are for someone loved. And in that glance away, you abandon yourself. Here is the uncomfortable truth: no one is coming to save you. Not in the cinematic sense. Not with the perfect bouquet and the perfectly timed apology. The people in your life may love you deeply, but they are flawed, distracted, and navigating their own survival. They will forget. They will fail. They will disappoint—not because they are monsters, but because they are human.