Dwain Northey (Gen X)

https://www.cbsnews.com/news/naacp-travel-advisory-florida-says-state-hostile-to-black-americans/

Remember the good old days when there were only travel advisories and or ban for, what some would call, third word countries? Well now because of the vile vitriol of one Governor Ron DeSantis the state of Florida, a vacation destination, has received a travel advisory by the NAACP.

The wannabe future President has made the climate so venomous in Florida the anyone who is a part of any minority group does not feel safe in the state. Black, Brown, LGTBQ+, these are all groups that are under attack in the Sunshine State. The majority Republican legislature and their fearful leader has passed laws that make almost everything a jailable offence and the fact that the state has very loose gun laws and a stand your ground law makes it more dangerous than being a blonde female in central America.

Florida residents are able to carry concealed guns without a permit under a bill signed into law by Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis. The law, which goes into effect on July 1, means that anyone who can legally own a gun in Florida can carry a concealed gun in public without any training or background check. This with their ridiculous stand your ground law, ‘Florida’s “Stand-Your-Ground” law was passed in 2005. The law allows those who feel a reasonable threat of death or bodily injury to “meet force with force” rather than retreat. Similar “Castle Doctrine” laws assert that a person does not need to retreat if their home is attacked.’ Makes it really sketchy to go there.

This in top of the don’t say gay rule and the new trans ruling that just passed.

“Florida lawmakers have no shame. This discriminatory bill is extraordinarily desperate and extreme in a year full of extreme, discriminatory legislation. It is a cruel effort to stigmatize, marginalize and erase the LGBTQ+ community, particularly transgender youth. Let me be clear: gender-affirming care saves lives. Every mainstream American medical and mental health organization – representing millions of providers in the United States – call for age-appropriate, gender-affirming care for transgender and non-binary people.

“These politicians have no place inserting themselves in conversations between doctors, parents, and transgender youth about gender-affirming care. And at the same time that Florida lawmakers crow about protecting parental rights they make an extra-constitutional attempt to strip parents of – you guessed it! – their parental rights. The Human Rights Campaign strongly condemns this bill and will continue to fight for LGBTQ+ youth and their families who deserve better from their elected leaders.”

This law makes it possible for anyone to just accuse someone of gender affirming care to have their child taken from them this would include someone traveling from out of state. This alone justifies a travel ban to the Magic Kingdom for families.

Oh, and I haven’t even mentioned DeSantis holy war with Disney, the largest employer in the state. I really hope the Mouse eats this ass holes lunch.

Well that’s enough bitching, thanks again for suffering though my rant.

  • Biblically Confused

    Dwain Northey (Gen X)

    There’s something almost endearingly on-the-nose about the Ten Commandments—a divine list that reads less like a soaring moral vision and more like a cosmic babysitter crouching down to eye level: Don’t hit. Don’t take what isn’t yours. Don’t lie. And seriously, stop eyeing your neighbor’s spouse like that. It’s less “aspire to greatness” and more “let’s first make sure you’re not actively setting the village on fire.”

    And to be fair, when Moses came down the mountain with those tablets, humanity wasn’t exactly crushing it on the “basic decency” front. The bar was somewhere below “don’t murder each other,” so the rules had to meet people where they were—which was apparently one bad afternoon away from chaos. The old law is reactive, corrective, a divine “no, stop that” repeated ten different ways. It’s moral guardrails for a species that keeps trying to drive off cliffs.

    Then along comes Jesus Christ, and instead of adding more “don’ts” to the list—because clearly humanity hadn’t quite mastered those yet—he flips the whole framework. Suddenly it’s not about restraining your worst impulses like you’re a toddler with a fork near an outlet. It’s about actively choosing better ones. Turn the other cheek. Love your neighbor. Care for the poor. Forgive people who absolutely do not deserve it.

    That’s not behavioral correction—that’s a complete reorientation.

    The old covenant says: “Don’t be awful.”
    The new covenant says: “Be good.”

    And those are not the same assignment.

    One is about avoiding wrongdoing, the moral equivalent of keeping your hands to yourself because someone’s watching. The other is about intention, about generosity, about doing something positive in a world where doing nothing is often easier. It’s the difference between not stealing your neighbor’s bread and actually making sure they have something to eat.

    Which, frankly, is a much harder ask.

    Because “don’t kill” is pretty straightforward for most people on most days. “Love your enemies”? That’s where things get inconvenient. That’s where the philosophy stops being a checklist and starts being work. You can technically follow every commandment and still be a deeply unpleasant human being. You can refrain from theft, murder, and adultery and still treat everyone around you like they’re disposable.

    Jesus’s version removes that loophole.

    It’s not enough to avoid being the villain. You’re supposed to show up as something closer to the hero—or at least a decent supporting character. It demands empathy instead of mere restraint, action instead of avoidance. It’s less “don’t do bad things” and more “do good things, even when it costs you.”

    And here’s where the irony creeps in. Plenty of people loudly champion the stone tablets—big fans of the “don’t do this” model—while quietly side-stepping the “love thy neighbor” part like it’s an optional add-on. The easier standard wins, because it’s far less intrusive. It doesn’t ask you to change your heart, just your behavior enough to stay within the lines.

    But the shift from Old Covenant to New Covenant isn’t subtle. It’s not a sequel that repeats the original plot—it’s a genre change. From law enforcement to moral aspiration. From “stop being terrible” to “start being better.”

    And if we’re being honest, humanity still seems pretty attached to the training wheels version.

    Because it’s one thing to avoid slapping the toddler’s hand. It’s another thing entirely to teach the toddler how to be kind.

  • So this is your guy!?

    Dwain Northey (Gen X)

    If you’re going to revive a theory that conveniently inflates presidential power, you’d think you’d at least be picky about who gets the crown.

    Because let’s be honest: the Unitary Executive Theory didn’t just appear out of thin air last Tuesday. Republicans have been flirting with it since at least the Ronald Reagan era—nurturing it, polishing it, bringing it out whenever Congress got a little too… involved. Back then, it was framed as efficiency. Strength. Decisiveness. The executive branch as a finely tuned machine.

    And now? Now that same machine has apparently been handed over to what can only be described as the political equivalent of a gas station snack aisle—specifically, the bag of trans fats you regret five minutes after opening.

    That’s the part that really lands. It’s not just the quiet drift toward something that looks suspiciously like monarchy-lite; it’s the enthusiastic decision about who gets to embody it. Of all the potential stewards of expanded executive authority, the choice landed on Donald Trump—a man whose relationship with restraint, nuance, or constitutional guardrails has always been… interpretive at best.

    But here’s where the logic really starts doing Olympic-level gymnastics.

    Because the same voices championing a muscular, unconstrained executive suddenly rediscover their deep and abiding love for limits, guardrails, and strict constitutional interpretation the moment the Oval Office is occupied by a Democrat. When it’s Barack Obama, or Joe Biden, or Bill Clinton, the unitary executive theory doesn’t disappear—it just… takes a nap. A long one. Possibly medicated.

    Suddenly, executive orders are tyranny. Agency authority is overreach. Any hint of unilateral action becomes a five-alarm constitutional fire. The very people who argued for decades that the presidency should be powerful enough to act decisively now insist it should be carefully restrained, thoroughly checked, and preferably tied down with procedural rope and a few well-placed court challenges.

    It’s less a consistent philosophy and more a toggle switch: expansive power when “our guy” is in charge, strict limitations when he’s not. The theory isn’t abandoned—it’s selectively applied, like sunscreen in winter.

    So the long game finally arrives. Decades of arguing for a stronger presidency. Decades of pushing the idea that one branch should have broader authority. And when the moment comes, the principle doesn’t hold—it flexes. A lot. Enough to make the United States Constitution feel less like a guiding framework and more like a prop that gets rearranged depending on who’s standing at the podium.

    Meanwhile, the “No More Kings” crowds keep growing, clinging to the outdated notion that maybe power should be constrained regardless of party. That maybe the warnings of King George III weren’t meant to be taken as a “what if we tried this again, but domestically?” experiment.

    At this point, the irony isn’t subtle anymore. It’s not even trying to hide. It’s standing in the town square, wearing a crown, holding a pocket Constitution in one hand—and a very selective memory in the other.

  • Earth Day

    Dwain Northey (Gen X)

    Earth Day began not as a feel-good celebration, but as a response to a very visible problem: the environment in the United States was in rough shape by the late 1960s. Rivers were polluted, cities were choked with smog, and industrial waste was often dumped with little regulation. One particularly shocking moment came with the 1969 Santa Barbara oil spill, which coated miles of coastline in crude oil and helped galvanize public outrage.

    In this context, U.S. Senator Gaylord Nelson of Wisconsin proposed a nationwide “teach-in” on environmental issues. Inspired by the anti-war protests of the time, he wanted to channel that same grassroots energy toward protecting the planet. On April 22, 1970, the first Earth Day was held, and it drew an estimated 20 million Americans—an enormous turnout that crossed political and social lines.

    The impact was immediate and lasting. Earth Day helped push environmental concerns into the mainstream and directly contributed to the creation of the United States Environmental Protection Agency and landmark legislation like the Clean Air Act and the Clean Water Act. What started as a national movement quickly grew into a global one; today, Earth Day is observed in more than 190 countries.

    Its importance lies in both awareness and accountability. Earth Day serves as a reminder that environmental protection isn’t automatic—it requires public pressure, political will, and individual action. It also highlights how interconnected issues like climate change, pollution, and biodiversity loss affect daily life, from the air we breathe to the water we drink.

    In short, Earth Day matters because it turned environmentalism from a fringe concern into a shared responsibility—and it continues to remind us that caring for the planet isn’t a one-day event, but an ongoing obligation.

  • Diet Coke, Cancer Cure

    Dwain Northey

    Ah yes, the pinnacle of modern scientific reasoning: if Diet Coke can murder a patch of innocent lawn, then surely it stands as humanity’s greatest untapped cancer treatment. Forget decades of oncology research, billions in funding, and the collective efforts of scientists worldwide—we’ve apparently been outmaneuvered by a soda can and a backyard experiment.

    The logic is airtight in the way a screen door keeps out water. You pour Diet Coke on grass, the grass dies. Therefore, if you pour Diet Coke into a human body—preferably at presidential levels of consumption—it must also annihilate anything undesirable. Tumors? Obliterated. Rogue cells? Gone. Internal organs? Well, let’s not get bogged down in details when we’re on the brink of a medical breakthrough.

    Of course, this raises some inconvenient questions. If Diet Coke is such an efficient biological assassin, why stop at cancer? Why aren’t we using it in hospitals as a universal cure-all? Why aren’t surgeons just cracking open a cold one mid-operation and calling it a day? “Scalpel, sutures, and a 12-pack, stat!” It’s almost as if the human body is slightly more complex than a suburban lawn and doesn’t respond to carbonation-based warfare in quite the same way.

    But no, the beauty of this reasoning lies in its simplicity. It bypasses nuance entirely. It ignores dosage, biology, chemistry, and basic cause-and-effect relationships in favor of a bold, confident leap: grass equals human tissue, soda equals miracle cure. It’s the kind of thinking that makes you wonder why we ever bothered with science in the first place when we could’ve just been conducting yard-based clinical trials all along.

    So yes, by all means, let’s crown Diet Coke as the silent guardian of presidential health. Not because of any evidence, mind you, but because somewhere, at some point, a patch of grass didn’t make it. And if that isn’t a rock-solid foundation for medical conclusions, what is?

  • Nuclear Family

    Dwain Northey (Gen X)

    Ah yes, the sacred, untouchable, sepia-toned relic: the 1950s “nuclear family.” One hardworking dad, one perpetually cheerful mom, 2.5 mathematically confusing children, a house with a yard, and a refrigerator full of optimism—all funded by a single income that apparently grew on the same tree as common sense and affordable housing.

    What a time. A high school diploma, a firm handshake, and the ability to not actively insult your boss could land you a job that paid enough to buy a home, raise children, take vacations, and still have money left over for a television the size of a small car. Meanwhile, mom stayed home, baked pies, and somehow never developed existential dread. It was less an economic system and more a Norman Rockwell painting that accidentally came to life.

    And then—how rude—the 1970s happened.

    Somewhere between disco, oil shocks, and the slow realization that maybe everything shouldn’t cost three nickels forever, the economy decided to evolve. Wages, however, bravely chose not to. Productivity went up, corporate profits soared, and the cost of living began its Olympic sprint toward the horizon. Housing? Up. Healthcare? Up. Education? Up. Wages? Well… they participated spiritually.

    Suddenly, that single-income dream started looking less like a plan and more like historical fiction.

    But surely, the collapse of the nuclear family must be blamed on something far more dramatic, right? Perhaps it was the terrifying rise of women wanting jobs. Or the scandalous idea that people might delay marriage. Or—brace yourself—avocado toast. Yes, clearly it was brunch that destroyed a mid-century economic model, not the minor detail that one income no longer covers basic survival.

    Because here’s the inconvenient part: the “traditional family” didn’t disappear because people woke up one day and thought, “You know what would be fun? Financial instability.” It disappeared because it became economically unworkable.

    By the late 20th century, two incomes weren’t a lifestyle upgrade—they were a survival mechanism. Not because families suddenly developed a passion for daycare logistics and scheduling chaos, but because rent doesn’t accept nostalgia as payment. Try walking into a modern housing market with a 1955 salary and a can-do attitude. You’ll be escorted out before you can say “fixed-rate mortgage.”

    And yet, the myth persists. Politicians and pundits alike dust off this 1950s fantasy like it’s a lost Eden, solemnly asking, “What happened to the nuclear family?” as if it simply wandered off one day, distracted by feminism and cable television.

    No, it didn’t wander off. It got priced out.

    The truth is far less romantic and far more spreadsheet-shaped: when the cost of living rises faster than wages for decades, something has to give. In this case, it was the ability for one person to financially support an entire household without also taking up a side hustle as a time traveler.

    So here we are, in the modern era, where the “new nuclear family” involves two incomes, three streaming subscriptions you’re thinking about canceling, and a shared understanding that retirement is more of a concept than a plan.

    But sure, let’s keep pretending the issue is cultural decay rather than basic arithmetic. Because nothing says serious economic analysis like blaming societal shifts instead of acknowledging that, yes—it’s the economy, stupid.

  • 420

    Dwain Northey (Gen X)

    The story of “420” isn’t some ancient code handed down by shadowy botanists—it’s a far more ordinary tale that accidentally grew into legend.

    It starts in the early 1970s in San Rafael High School, where a group of students nicknamed themselves the Waldos. Their mission wasn’t philosophical or political—they were trying to find a rumored abandoned cannabis crop somewhere in the hills of Marin County. They agreed to meet after school at 4:20 p.m., using “420” as a shorthand for both the time and their little treasure hunt. Spoiler: they never found the crop, but the code stuck.

    From there, things get more interesting. The Waldos had connections to the orbit of the Grateful Dead, whose fans—the famously nomadic Deadheads—were excellent at spreading ideas, trends, and, apparently, time-based slang. “420” began circulating beyond a single high school, morphing from “meet at this time” into “let’s smoke.”

    By the 1990s, the term got a major boost when High Times published and popularized it, effectively canonizing “420” as cannabis shorthand. Once media picked it up, the number escaped its humble origins and became cultural currency.

    Then came April 20—4/20—which evolved into an unofficial holiday for cannabis enthusiasts. Gatherings, protests, and celebrations began popping up in places like Golden Gate Park and beyond, blending counterculture, advocacy, and a fair amount of smoke.

    As for why this number stuck when so many other codes didn’t—it’s partly timing, partly luck, and partly because it sounds just cryptic enough to feel like you’re in on something. Over time, “420” shed its inside-joke origins and became a global symbol for cannabis culture, even as laws and attitudes toward marijuana shifted dramatically.

    So what began as a bunch of teenagers looking for a mythical stash turned into one of the most recognizable pieces of modern slang. Not exactly sacred history—but in its own hazy way, a cultural myth with surprisingly well-documented roots.

  • MAGA Conundrum

    Dwain Northey (Gen X)

    There’s a certain kind of confidence that doesn’t bother with consistency. It just kicks the door in, plants a flag in the living room, and declares victory over a house it insists it doesn’t even want to be in. That, more or less, is the current philosophical backbone of the “America First” crowd: a worldview that somehow manages to shout “we don’t need anyone” while also demanding that everyone pay very close attention.

    It’s a fascinating contradiction—like someone loudly quitting a party while climbing onto the table to make sure the entire room notices their exit.

    On one hand, we’re told America must be the biggest, toughest, most dominant force on Earth. Not just strong—visibly strong. The kind of strong that needs to be announced, repeated, capitalized, and possibly trademarked. Strength measured not in stability or alliances, but in how effectively we can glare at other countries until they feel uncomfortable. Diplomacy is for the weak; cooperation is code for losing; and if you’re not “winning,” what are you even doing here?

    On the other hand, we’re also told: we don’t need anyone. Alliances? Burdens. Global leadership? Overrated. International cooperation? Suspicious at best, traitorous at worst. Why bother with messy relationships when you can just… not? Why maintain decades-long partnerships when you can dramatically shrug and walk away, preferably while muttering something about how everyone else was holding you back anyway?

    So which is it?

    Are we the world’s enforcer, or are we the guy who moved out to a cabin in the woods because neighbors are annoying?

    The answer, apparently, is: yes.

    Because the real through-line isn’t strategy—it’s attitude. It’s not about building a coherent foreign policy; it’s about maintaining a posture. A vibe. A kind of geopolitical chest-thumping paired with a deep suspicion of anyone who might suggest cooperation requires compromise. It’s dominance without responsibility, isolation without humility.

    We don’t need allies… but they better respect us.
    We’re pulling back from the world… but the world better not forget who’s in charge.
    We’re done with global commitments… but still expect global deference.

    It’s less a doctrine and more a mood swing with a flag attached.

    And the beauty of it—politically speaking—is that it works. If you disengage, it’s not retreat; it’s strength. If you alienate allies, it’s not instability; it’s independence. If relationships fray, well, that just proves they weren’t worth having in the first place. Every outcome reinforces the premise, because the premise was never meant to be tested—just declared.

    In this framework, the world isn’t a network of partnerships; it’s a series of transactions. Everything is a deal, every country a potential adversary or subordinate, and every interaction a chance to “win.” Long-term stability is nice, sure, but have you considered the immediate satisfaction of a well-timed threat?

    So we end up in this strange, self-constructed paradox: a nation trying to dominate a system it increasingly refuses to participate in. A superpower that wants all the authority of global leadership with none of the obligations. A country that insists it’s above everyone else while quietly stepping away from the very structures that made that position possible.

    It’s not quite bullying, and it’s not quite isolationism. It’s something more peculiar—like declaring yourself the ruler of a room you’ve already stormed out of.

    But don’t worry. As the door slams, you’ll definitely hear about how much better things are on the other side.

  • Make America Grate

    Dwain Northey (Gen X)

    There was a time when “Make America Great Again” sounded like a slogan stitched onto a red hat. Now it feels more like a set of instructions—specifically, the kind you’d find on a cheese grater. Firmly grasp the country, drag it steadily downward, and call whatever falls off “progress.”

    Because “great,” as it turns out, has a homophone. And we are living in it.

    We’ve begun to grate.

    Not in the inspiring, moon-landing, interstate-highway, “we built this” kind of way. No, this is the slow, grinding erosion of standards—the kind that doesn’t make a sound at first, until you realize the edges are gone. Expertise? Grated. Institutions? Grated. The quiet expectation that the people in charge should know what they’re doing? Finely shredded.

    Take something as uncontroversial as the weather. The sky used to be one of the few things we could all agree on—blue meant blue, hurricanes meant “maybe listen to the scientists.” Now even that has been fed through the blade. Funding gets trimmed, agencies get hollowed out, and suddenly the same country that once led the world in atmospheric science is checking the forecast like a student copying homework.

    We lean on European weather models—not because collaboration is new or bad, but because self-sufficiency has quietly slipped out the back door. It’s not a partnership when you’ve dismantled your own tools and are now hoping someone else brought theirs.

    And this is where the slogan starts to sound less like nostalgia and more like performance art.

    Because while we’re busy sanding down expertise at home, we’re simultaneously projecting strength abroad—loudly, theatrically, insistently. We posture. We escalate. We wrap ourselves in the language of dominance while borrowing the intellectual infrastructure we used to export. It’s a curious form of patriotism that declares independence while relying on others to double-check the forecast before we pack an umbrella.

    War, or the constant flirtation with it, becomes the ultimate distraction. It’s the cymbal crash that drowns out the quieter, more consequential story: that you cannot steadily degrade the systems that make a country function and expect the illusion of strength to hold indefinitely. Eventually, the gap between what we say we are and what we’ve allowed ourselves to become gets too wide to ignore.

    That’s the real hypocrisy—not just in policy, but in identity.

    We still tell ourselves we’re the best. The most capable. The leaders. But leadership isn’t a declaration; it’s a maintenance job. It requires investment, humility, and the uncomfortable acknowledgment that expertise matters. That facts matter. That maybe the people studying the atmosphere, the economy, or the fragile geometry of global stability aren’t the enemy.

    Instead, we’ve chosen the grater.

    And the thing about grating is that it’s irreversible. You don’t get to reassemble what you’ve shredded and call it whole again. You can only keep going, convincing yourself that smaller pieces somehow add up to something greater.

    So here we are—making America “great,” one thin shaving at a time.

  • Double Standard

    Dwain Northey (Gen X)

    There was a time—not that long ago, though it now feels like a different geological era—when every misplaced syllable from Joe Biden was treated like a five-alarm fire in the national psyche. A verbal stumble? Breaking news. A pause mid-sentence? Panel discussion. A slightly meandering anecdote? Cue the solemn declarations: this is it, the decline, the unraveling, the end of coherence as we know it.

    We were told, with the urgency usually reserved for asteroid warnings, that the Republic itself was hanging by the delicate thread of a conjugated verb. Words like “senile” and “dementia” weren’t whispered with concern—they were hurled like confetti at a particularly mean-spirited parade. Entire segments of the media ecosystem seemed to function as linguistic forensic labs, analyzing every Biden utterance like it was the Zapruder film, except instead of bullets, we were tracking dropped consonants.

    And now—well. Now we live in a time of interpretive flexibility.

    Enter Donald Trump, a man who can take a straightforward concept like immigration policy and turn it into something that sounds like it was assembled from refrigerator magnets during a mild electrical storm. We are told, for instance, that people are arriving on “pork visas”—which, one assumes, is either a new agricultural exchange program or perhaps a deli loyalty rewards system gone horribly wrong. Credit cards are apparently being handed out like party favors, and asylum seekers are not fleeing danger so much as escaping what he imagines to be a sort of global network of “insane institutions,” which sounds less like policy analysis and more like the plot of a low-budget thriller.

    And then there was the small matter of the Jesus photo. A perfectly normal sentence to type in 2026, by the way. Presented with an image of himself styled as the Son of God—a piece of digital art so subtle it practically winked—he was reportedly told by staff that it had been doctored. To which the response was not, “Ah, I see, thank you,” but rather, “Oh well, I was a doctor.” Which is impressive, really. Not the content of the statement, but the sheer confidence with which it sidesteps reality, logic, and basic sentence structure all at once.

    But perhaps my favorite subplot in this ongoing theater of selective concern is the triumphant return of the cognitive exam—specifically, the way Donald Trump brandishes it like an Olympic gold medal. The “perfect score,” we’re told. The flawless performance. The intellectual decathlon, apparently, now featuring identifying animals and remembering a short list of words.

    Here’s the part that tends to get left out of the victory lap: cognitive exams aren’t handed out like raffle tickets at a county fair. They’re not a fun bonus round for people who are just too sharp and need an extra challenge. In any clinical setting—something you’d know if you’ve spent time in healthcare—they’re administered when there’s a concern. A baseline needs to be established because something has raised a flag. Stroke. Dementia. Alzheimer’s. Observable decline. That’s the context. That’s the club.

    It’s not a participation trophy. It’s not even a merit badge. It’s closer to a diagnostic checkpoint—a quiet, clinical “let’s make sure everything’s okay here,” which, by definition, means someone, somewhere, thought everything might not be okay.

    So the spectacle of boasting about acing one is… unusual. It’s like proudly announcing you passed a sobriety test while insisting you were never suspected of drinking. Congratulations, I suppose, on successfully identifying a giraffe and recalling “person, woman, man, camera, TV.” Truly stirring stuff. But the existence of the test itself is the part that usually matters, not the standing ovation afterward.

    And yet, somehow, this doesn’t trigger the same chorus of alarm. No breathless chyrons. No wall-to-wall speculation. No anguished op-eds about fitness for office based on the ability to complete a screening tool designed to detect impairment.

    Which brings us back to that lingering question: when did cognitive concern become so… situational?

    Because if we’re going to treat mental sharpness as a prerequisite for leadership—and that’s a reasonable standard—then it probably shouldn’t depend on who’s talking, or how much we already agree with them. Otherwise, we’re not actually evaluating capacity. We’re just grading on a curve that shifts with our preferences.

    And that’s not a medical assessment. That’s branding.

  • Bye Bye Buck

    Dwain Northey (Gen X)

    I didn’t expect to be writing something like this, and if I’m being honest, I’ve gone back and forth about how to even say it without sounding either colder than I feel or softer than the reality deserves.

    First, I should be clear about one thing—I wasn’t the one who rescued Buck. I didn’t go out looking for him, didn’t make that initial choice with open eyes and a plan. He was brought into my life, and I was the one who ended up with him, the one who tried to make it work once he was already here.

    Bringing Buck back to the shelter wasn’t an easy decision, even if on paper it might look like a simple one. He’s not a bad dog. That part matters to me, and I want it said out loud. He’s just… a lot. Loud in a way that fills every corner of a space, restless in a way that doesn’t settle, and wired for a life that doesn’t really fit inside the walls I have to live within.

    And the truth is, I’m not the person he needs. I don’t have the patience, the space, or honestly the inclination to turn him into the dog he could probably become with the right person. That’s not me being cruel—it’s me being realistic. There’s a version of this story where I keep him and try to force it, but that version probably ends worse for both of us.

    Still, none of that makes it feel good.

    Because even if I didn’t bond with him the way people always hope you will, I’m not made of stone. I know what it means for a dog to go back into that system, into confinement, into waiting. That part sits heavy. It’s one thing to admit something isn’t working; it’s another to know the consequence of that truth for something that doesn’t get a say.

    If circumstances were different—more space, fewer constraints, a life that could absorb his energy instead of being overwhelmed by it—maybe this ends another way. But it’s not. And when the choice comes down to keeping a roof over my head or stretching things to a breaking point for his sake, that’s not really a choice at all, no matter how much I might wish it were.

    So this is the part that feels like an apology, even if I don’t know who exactly I’m apologizing to. Maybe to him. Maybe to myself for not being better suited. Maybe to the idea that things should have worked out differently.

    What I do hope—genuinely—is that someone else walks into that shelter and sees what I couldn’t fully step into. Someone with more room, more patience, more willingness to meet him where he is and shape him into something better. Because I do think that’s possible for him.

    Letting him go doesn’t mean I don’t care. It just means caring doesn’t always translate into keeping.

    And sometimes, doing what you have to do doesn’t feel right—but it’s still what has to be done.