The Great Divide

Tailor-made content curated by our skilled team of experts to help you navigate separations, and see light at the end of the tunnel
Ready to Reclaim Your Summer? Vacations as a newly single mom can feel more like a survival mission than a break—but they don’t have to. Whether you're navigating bathroom stalls with three kids or debating if it’s too soon to return to “that” beach, this guide helps you travel smarter, not harder. Discover how to start small, build your confidence, and even invite your tribe to make the memories sweeter (and cheaper). Because you deserve more than just “getting through it”—you deserve joy, connection, and a vacation that works for you.
Ever tried to fake professionalism while a rogue nipple cover is plotting its escape? Welcome to Stick With Me, Baby (Or Don’t)—a braless manifesto turned cautionary tale. From public speaking in strategic knits to retrieving silicone pasties off asphalt like a war hero reclaiming her fallen, this blog spills the hilarious highs and unfiltered lows of ditching your underwire in favor of freedom. If you’ve ever questioned your relationship with your bra—or just need a laugh—you’ll want to read this one (preferably while not wearing one).
What happens when the rom-com fades and love starts showing up in sweatpants instead of fireworks? From Soulmates to Roommates dives into the unfiltered truth of long-term relationships—the quirks, the chores, the thermostat wars—and why this unglamorous phase might be the real love story. If your relationship feels more like a to-do list than a fairytale, this one’s for you.
What started as a late-night Marie Kondo binge turned into a full-blown emotional fire drill—minus the spark joy and plus a whole lot of clarity. One mental wildfire later, I had a “hell yes” pile of ride-or-die outfits and a closet that finally made sense. This wasn’t just a wardrobe cleanse—it was a sanity reclaim. Spoiler: sometimes the best therapy comes with a hamper and a side of iced tea.

Closet Fires and Fresh Starts 🔥:
How I Accidentally Reclaimed My Sanity

I accidentally watched a Marie Kondo episode last night. For me, it was like rubbernecking at a car crash—morbid curiosity overpowered good judgment. The scene? A woman standing in stunned silence before a Mount Everest of clothes, as per the Kondo Method: take every item of clothing—closet, drawer, under-bed bin, forgotten suitcase in the garage—and pile it all in one place.

Apparently, until you see the full scale of your stuff, you can’t really decide what should stay. As I peeked toward my own closet (and let’s be real, the coat rack, the hall closet, the chair that holds laundry in limbo), I had one thought:

What kind of fresh hell would this be for me?  Not today, Satan!

Instead, my brain went straight to wildfire mode. As in: What would I grab if my house was on fire and I had 90 seconds to run? I’ve actually done this before… and this was the result!! That kind of panic prioritization? It’s clarifying.

So, I ran to my closet, grabbed my absolute ride-or-die pieces, and tossed them on the bed. With my closet cleanse underway, I hit the “other storage areas.” You know the ones. The pile grew—modestly, intentionally. Then I left the room to grab a tall glass of iced tea.

 


Front Porch Sweet Tea

5 regular-sized tea bags (Red Rose is best if you can find them)

4 cups of water (I use a 4-cup/1 quart glass measuring cup)

Put the above in the microwave with a small plate on top for 8-9 minutes (take it out before it boils).

When it comes out of the microwave, let it steep for no more than 3 minutes and remove (but not squeeze) the tea bags (I refrigerate them to put them on my eyes in the next morning’s bathtub).

Add about 4 – 5 Tablespoons of sugar (more if necessary).

Pour into your pitcher and add about 2 cups more of water.

Pour tea over a tall glass of ice and immediately serve.

** If you want to add lemon or mint- add it to each glass rather than the pitcher so that your refrigerated tea will last several days and not get cloudy.


When I came back and looked at the pile, something clicked. Every single item had three things in common:

 

    1. Comfortable

    1. Flattering

    1. Regularly earns compliments (bonus points if it survived a date night trauma)

That was my “hell yes” pile. No spark-joy whispers necessary—this was more like a wardrobe truth bomb. I repeated the same process with shoes and handbags. And guess what? The same three filters held up.

Next step? I placed a giant empty hamper with removeable bags in my closet, aka the Goodbye Bin. Great for second guess free and immediate removal when the task was finished. Anything I didn’t instinctively grab in my fire-drill moment? On notice. I didn’t toss everything right away (we’re healing, not hemorrhaging), but during boring Zoom meetings or when I need a rage-cleaning moment, I pluck a few items and send them packing.

Does this process “spark joy”?

Not exactly.

But it does something better:

It “Reclaims Sanity”.

And honestly, that’s the vibe for this Spring. Clear space, clear head, and a closet full of “hell yes.”