Affirmation Lab
Did you know that the first wave of English-sponsored systemic trauma didn't start in 1619? It started in 1565 with a ship named—in a dark twist of irony—the "Jesus of Lübeck." 🚢
Clock in, Associates! 🕒🕵️♀️
The rosemary and peppermint are diffusing, the tea is poured, and the lab is officially open for Case File 2001-J.
Today, we are taking a clinical and forensic lens to a story many think they know: Joseph "Jody" Summers. While some see a classic film, I’m auditing the Stagnation Loop and the Protective Enclave that has kept this subject in a psychological nursery for twenty years.
In this Audit, we investigate:
• The Sanctuary Breach: What really happens when a dominant male enters the Jurisdiction of Comfort.
• Resource Guarding: Why that "argument over eggs" was actually a lethal collision with reality.
• The Clinical Truth: Why Jody’s tears during the chokehold represent the violent friction of being reborn.
Fuel the Lab: 🍪☕
I’m pairing this audit with our signature Houston-exclusive whiskey oatmeal raisin cookies. Because you can’t audit this level of trauma without the right fuel.
Join the Jury:
I want to hear from you. Is Jody a victim of his environment, or is he finally being forced to grow up? Watch the full trailer on YouTube and drop your verdict in the comments below! 👇
✌️⚖️
Houston has a story that doesn't always make the textbooks. While we celebrate the heroes who went North, we often forget the thousands who looked toward Mexico for their sovereignty.
Did you know that in 1829, Mexico’s first Black president, Vicente Guerrero, abolished slavery? This transformed the Rio Grande into a threshold of immediate freedom. For many of our ancestors right here in Texas, freedom wasn't a distant promise—it was a river crossing.
We are the architects of our own paths. If the ground you’re standing on won't hold you, find the ground that will. "
Most people think of the 1830s as a time of only chains. But deep in the Florida swamps, a group of warriors, families, and leaders built a kingdom so powerful that the U.S. Army had to admit defeat.
General Jesup wrote in 1837: "This is a Negro War." He wasn't just fighting for land; he was fighting a people who refused to be property.
They forced a treaty. They kept their freedom. And today, we still carry that "Unconquered" blood. ✊🏾
Which part of this history did they "forget" to teach you in school? Let’s talk about it below. 👇🏾
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