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Dream Life in Paris

Questions explained agreeable preferred strangers too him her son. Set put shyness offices his females him distant.

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Without mistakes, there is no change.

Feel the anxiety and do it anyway.

Being kind to yourself – at least try. Let that be enough!

Tales in the Tissue by Natasha Charles McQueen

Tales in the Tissue by Natasha Charles McQueen

Tales in the Tissue by Natasha Charles McQueen

Beneath my skin, the scores run deep,
A silent testament, promises to keep.
Each mark, a chapter, a tale untold,
Whispers in the dark, warmth in the cold.

This flesh, a canvas of invisible ink,
Stories submerged, more stitched than we think.
A repository of echoes, laughter, and cries,
Moments of breaking, moments to rise.

In marrow’s embrace, secrets reside,
Resilience and tears, in the ebb and tide.
Heartbeat’s rhythm, a drumbeat of wars,
A symphony of survival, opening doors.

Deep in cells, memories stored,
Of love lost, and love that soared.
A tapestry woven with careful thread—
Stumble, repair, rise from the dread.

My body, a testament to battles unseen,
Warrior standing, fierce and serene.
Weightless chains it learns to wear,
Dances through storms, defies despair.

Deeper than scars, a light that glows,
Strength enduring, through highs and lows.
In my being, a flame burns bright,
Guiding through darkness, leading to light.

This score, a narrative of grace and might—
Beauty found in desolate night.
My body, guardian of soul’s lore,
Keys to countless doors, forevermore.

Dive into depths, where stories lie,
This silent score, the tears I’ve cried.
In the deep, find what I seek:
Essence of strength—fiercely unique.

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🔥 The Notic Calls Sleep

🔥 The Notic Calls Sleep (A Ritual of Surrender) Before the Ritual Begins… Sleep is not an afterthought. It is a return. Here, we do not chase healing. We meet it. We move through it. Here, we do not chase sleep. We surrender to it. This is the ritual. This is the invitation. Now, when you are ready—read. In Dead Mic Society, Sleep is love. Dreams do not wander. They are carried. They do not beg for rest. They are received. They do not chase the night. They are welcomed into it. But here, in our world? Sleep is restless. Shallow. Fleeting. The demands of alertness. Productivity. Awareness. Readiness. Even in exhaustion, the mind refuses to yield. Some nights, sleep comes easily. Other nights, it waits at the door. It lingers. Watching. Waiting to be let in. But sleep is not something to chase. It is something to surrender to. Tonight, let the ritual begin. Come to me, Sleep… I am ready. Come to my sleep. We have done this before. (Pause. A slow inhale… a long, steady exhale… let the moment settle.) You know how to take me. You always do. The weight of today. The weight of yesterday. The weight of all the tomorrows I have not yet lived— I set them down. I breathe you in— slow, deep… you fill me, the way you always have. I breathe out. A steady exhale, releasing the day. Pull me under, Sleep… take your time. Nothing to fix. (Pause.) Nothing to chase. (Pause.) Nothing to hold. (Pause.) Come to me, Sleep. I place my thoughts into the river. They drift past, unhurried. I watch them go. I do not reach for them. They are not mine to carry through the night. I scan my body, inch by inch, with quiet kindness. My forehead softens. My jaw loosens. My shoulders drop. My hands relax. The tension in my chest melts away. Ease. My body was made for this. My body knows how to rest. There is nothing to do. Only something to welcome. Come to me, Sleep. The blanket holds me. Warm and steady. I am safe. The pillow cradles my head. Familiar and forgiving. I am cared for. The night is quiet. Humming with peace. I belong to this moment. I breathe in… I breathe out… I let go. If thoughts return, I greet them gently… and let them drift away. If memories rise, I let them soften… fading into quiet. If my mind stirs, I guide it back— to my breath, to my body, to the quiet. The world will wait. The sun will rise without me. I am allowed to rest. Come now, Sleep… take what’s already yours.  

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An Education (In My Own Words) by Natasha Charles McQueen Ph.D

How I Learned to Name It It was never taught—just modeled:a hand pulled back too fast,a glance that stayed too long.Emotion was a private thing,like shameor hunger. I learned to watchbefore I spoke,to feelwithout showing it.To smile with teeth,to cry like a thief. Later,books said: Name it to tame it.Therapists said: Go deeper.I nodded, like I understood.But the body—the body never lied. Sometimes I say griefwhen I mean regret.Sometimes I say angerbecause betrayal feels too soft. Emotional literacyis not elegance.It is the bruise you pressbecause you want to knowif it still hurts. Nobody taught me how to name it.I just watched.Watched people go quiet when things got hard.Watched people laugh when they wanted to cry.Watched adults lie to themselves,call it strength, call it keeping the peace. I learned not to speak about what I felt.I learned to stay useful.I learned to read the roombefore I ever read a book. When I finally got asked how do you feel?I froze.Not because I had no feelings,but because there were too many.Stacked. Compressed. Years thick.And I had no map. So I gave answers like:Tired.Fine.I don’t know. But I did know.I just didn’t trust that it was safe to say it. Sad meant weak.Angry meant dangerous.Confused meant stupid.And joy—joy felt like a setup for a fall. I had to unlearn all of that. I had to sit in rooms and admitthat I didn’t know the differencebetween hurt and rage.Between numb and calm.Between alone and abandoned. And even that—even just saying I don’t know—was the beginning. What no one told me:Emotional literacyis not about naming feelings like flashcards.It’s about staying in the roomwhen the feeling feels bigger than you.It’s about breathing through the storyyou told yourself at age sixand never updated. It’s about asking,What is this feeling trying to protect?What did I never get to say?What part of me is still waiting to be seen? Some days I still get it wrong.I call fear logic.I call sadness tiredness.I call need a flaw. No one told me the bodywould be the first to speak.Before I knew the word for no,my stomach had already clenched it.Before I could define shame,my spine had curled around itlike a dying animal. This was not education.This was survival.And later—years later—when someone saidyou seem disconnected from your feelings,I laughed,because I had lived inside themlike a house with no windows.Everything came in.Nothing got out. Emotional literacywas not a vocabulary test.It was learning how to survive a roomwhere everyone smilesbut no one speaks of the weight in their chest. I was fluent in delay.I spoke I am fine in twenty dialects.My tears translated as weakness.My anger got coded as too much.It took decadesto unlearn that silencewas not peace,and numbnesswas not resilience. No one told methat naming a feelingis not the same as escaping it.That sad is not enoughwhen what I meant wasI feel discarded,out of rhythm with my own worth.That anxious does not explainthe way I rehearse every conversationlike a closing argumentfor a crime I didn’t commit. I had to teach myselfhow to sitwith what scorched me. To ask, not how do I stop this?but what is this asking of me? To see envy not as failure,but as hunger unmet.To see rage not as threat,but as grief’s feral cousin. I read theory,but theory didn’t hold mewhen my chest locked up.Books gave me language,but not presence.Not touch.Not safety.Safety cameonly after I chose to believethat feelingwas not a weaknessI needed to justify. Now, when the old ghosts return,I do not turn them out.I let them sit.I offer them tea.I say—Tell me what you need me to know.And I listen,without flinching. But now I notice when I do it.Now I pause.Now I stay. That is the education.Not a lesson.A practice.Every day.

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Ghost-lit beauty—Fog as memory by N. Charles McQueen

Finding My WayGhost-lit beauty—Fog as memory (Start with a slow, measured pace, voice soft and reflective)Through fog-thick woods, I move alone,Mist curls tight around flesh and bone.The path dissolves beneath my feet—Even silence feels incomplete. (Pause, take a deep breath, then continue with a slightly quicker pace)Trees stretch high with arms askew,A forest warped in shades of truth.No sign, no sound, no northern flame,Only shadows whisper my name. (Lower voice to a whisper for the next lines)Birdsong smothered, whispers thin,Painted ghosts on branches grim.The air hangs thick, the light deceives—Where even hope begins to leave. (Raise voice slightly, with a hint of hope and determination)Yet in the murk, a flicker stays—Small and stubborn in the haze.It pulls, it hums, a steady thread,A quiet dream that is not dead. (Pause, take a slow breath, voice calm and steady)Each step is slow, but not in vain.Each breath cut sharp, but I remain.In this place where dark holds sway,Tiny lights still show the way. (Voice warm and nostalgic)Each glow, a name I hold like flame,Moments carved into my name.A voice, a laugh, a hand once near—Their warmth survives, even here. (Slow and heartfelt, almost a whisper)And as I walk, I call them near—The ones whose voices still ring clear.Their love, a compass in the grey,Still guiding me—not lost,just finding my way.

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What to Do in a Crisis

Reach Out to Professionals: During a mental health crisis, your first move should always be to contact a mental health professional or therapist. Their expertise is essential for effective management and resolution. In Urgent Cases: If you can't access a hotline or a professional and need help immediately, the nearest emergency room should be your next stop.