Split Happens Blog
Split happens, but I happen louder!
Well, What Did I Do:
A Spicy Audit of my Behavior
Sometimes I react like a raccoon in a thunderstorm. Sometimes I say things that make people blink slowly and reevaluate their life choices. And sometimes I’m just… loud. Not cruel. Not unstable. Just emotionally spicy in a room full of beige.
So when someone flinches at my existence, or I feel the vibe shift mid-conversation, I ask the only question that matters:
Well… what did I do?
And not in the “I’m innocent” kind of way.
In the “I might’ve emotionally flash-mobbed someone’s nervous system while trying to be helpful” kind of way.
Diagnosis ≠ Deflection
Yes, I have BPD. Yes, my brain sometimes throws glitter at a fire and calls it a coping skill. But that doesn’t mean I get to emotionally detonate and call it “growth.” It means I pause. I reflect. I ask:
• Was that me protecting myself?
• Or was that me projecting like a trauma powerpoint?
Because there’s a difference between being triggered and being reckless. And I don’t want to be someone who uses my diagnosis as a shield. I want to use it as a mirror. Even when the reflection is… spicy
Accountability, But Make It Sparkle
I’ve ghosted people because I couldn’t regulate.
I’ve snapped because I felt unsafe.
I’ve emotionally monologued when a simple “I’m sorry” would’ve sufficed.
I’ve used vulnerability like a sword and called it healing.
And when I do that? I don’t get to vanish like a moody magician. I get to sit in the mess, name it, and—ugh—repair it.
Because accountability isn’t shame. It’s spicy growth. And I’m allergic to shame, but I’m not immune to consequences.
Sometimes I Did Nothing. Sometimes I Did Everything.
Sometimes I was just direct.
Sometimes I was just honest.
Sometimes I was just… regulated enough to say “no” without a smile.
And someone else didn’t like that.
That’s not my diagnosis. That’s their discomfort.
I’m not here to be digestible. I’m here to be real.
Final Thoughts
So yeah—maybe I was “too much.”
Or maybe I was just enough in a room that preferred silence.
Either way, I’ll keep asking:
Well… what did I do?
And if the answer is “existed too loudly,” I’ll take that as a compliment.
But if the answer is “caused harm,” I’ll own it. I’ll fix it. I’ll grow.
Because Split Happens—but I happen louder. And I happen with glitter, chaos, and a deeply inconvenient amount of self-awareness.
Split happens, but I happen louder!
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