One-Liner Healing and the Weaponization of Wit
You ever process trauma like it’s a tight five at the Comedy Cellar?
That’s me.
A walking paradox in eyeliner and emergency room wristbands.
I’ve been through some sh*t—
and I brought a punchline to the crime scene.
Not because it was funny.
Because if I didn’t laugh, I’d combust.
And I already did that twice in 2018.
See, people expect grief to look like weeping on the floor.
They’re not ready for a one-woman roast of your own damn breakdown.
I’d be sitting in a puddle of panic going,
“Well, this’ll be a great opening for Chapter 14: ‘Crisis with Cheeto Dust.’”
And they’d just… stare.
Like I was breaking some unspoken trauma dress code.
Like pain should be polite.
But I don’t do polite anymore.
I do precision.
With punchlines.
And memes.
And merch that says, “Therapy Made Me Funnier Than You.”
Because sarcasm isn’t avoidance.
It’s strategy.
It’s the space between “I’m falling apart” and “Get your phones out, this one’s gonna go viral.”
People try to call it deflection.
Nah.
It’s artillery.
You can’t cancel someone who already sold their rock bottom on a t-shirt.
You can’t shame a survivor who sells hoodies that say
“I processed that in public—and made rent.”
I didn’t just survive abuse, gaslighting, grief, and systemic neglect.
I went on tour with it.
Performed it live.
Took trauma and turned it into a script with pacing, callbacks, and exit applause.
Why?
Because laughter was the first sound I made that didn’t echo back as pain.
People ask how I did it.
How I kept going.
Simple.
I got funny.
When I couldn’t cry anymore, I wrote jokes.
When I couldn’t scream, I designed stickers.
When I couldn’t explain it—
I just hit record and said,
“Okay y’all, listen to this sh*t…”
So if you’re still in the thick of it—
Still holding your story like it’s too raw to be seen—
Let me be proof.
Humor isn’t the opposite of hurt.
It’s the weapon forged from it.
I survived because I made the pain speak fluently in sarcasm.
I made grief sit on a stool and hold a damn mic.
And I gave tragedy a new job:
Open for me.
I Survived Because I Got Funny
Some cry, some pray, some rage at fate.
I cracked a joke at trauma’s gate.
Laughter saved me, sharp and bright—
My rescue raft in pitch-black night.
I sharpened wit on all I lost,
Each punchline paid what silence cost.
Now humor’s how I swing my sword—
Laugh-laced survival, fully restored.
—The Funny Phoenix, laughing last and loudest
