30. I Got Ghosted by a Support Group

Even my trauma was too intense for their Pinterest vibes.

I didn’t come in hot.
I came in smoldering.
Like, still-smoking-from-the-last-gaslighting kind of scorched.
Hopeful, maybe.
Desperate, definitely.
Thinking: finally—a place where I don’t have to explain my existence in footnotes.

Instead?
I walked into a room that smelled like lavender, white fragility, and expired banana bread.
There was a salt lamp in the corner and a sign that said:

“Healing is a Journey — But Make It Gentle.”
Meanwhile I’m like:
Gentle? Sis, I just crawled here from the emotional apocalypse.

First group, I said “narcissistic abuse.”
The lady leading the circle physically flinched.
The guy next to her offered me a coloring book and asked if I’d tried journaling with my “non-dominant hand to access inner child grief.”

Bitch, my inner child is feral.
She doesn’t want crayons—she wants court transcripts and closure.

Week two, I opened up.
Dropped a little truth bomb about generational trauma and suicidal ideation.
Everyone went silent.
Like I’d farted in a chapel.

Next thing I know, I’m getting assigned “positive affirmations” and “gratitude practice”
while still trying not to disassociate during the icebreaker.

And then?
Poof.
Ghosted.
From a support group.

No more invites.
No “how are you?”
Just a quiet little fade-out,
like I’d tracked mud onto their vision board.

Imagine that.
Being too real for people literally holding space for trauma.
I said “This hurts,”
and they said “Could you maybe hurt less… loudly?”

So now?
I run my own damn circle.
We call it:

The Unfiltereds: Come As You Are, Leave When You’re Ready.

There’s no tea.
Just dark roast coffee and louder truths.
We scream into voids, not vision boards.
We color outside the f*cking lines.

And if someone brings banana bread?
It comes with a warning label and a side of sarcasm.

Because I don’t do pastel recovery.
I don’t want to “trust the process” if the process can’t hold me messy.

I want the group that claps for ugly truths,
laughs mid-breakdown,
and keeps showing up even when the story’s not inspiring yet.

And now?

That’s exactly who I’ve got.
Not a ghost in sight.
Just real people,
real pain,
and a support group that bites back.


I Got Ghosted by a Support Group

They hugged, they nodded, then went poof—
My trauma didn’t match their roof.
I cried too loud, I bled too bright,
Apparently pain has to be polite.

They vanished soft in pastel grace,
Left me raw in cyberspace.
So I built my own damn crew—
With fire, truth, and goats in view.

—The Funny Phoenix, founding feral friendship circles

Put a Dollar in the Juke (Joke) Box

This Whirld runs on punchlines and petty cash. Tips help fund emotional damage with a comedic twist. Humor kept me alive—now it pays the therapy bills. Every dollar helps. Every laugh heals. Or at least distracts. So, if you’ve ever laughed out loud, felt seen, heard, or just temporarily less insane (you're welcome) thanks to Christy, consider:

👉 Throwing a buck in the trauma jukebox to keep the jokes flowing.
👉 Supporting a sad clown with a sarcasm addiction

Because laughter might be free — but keeping the lights on sure isn’t.

Laugh cry overshare funniest thing that ever happened to you when you were losing your s***–go.

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About Us

If this place sparked something in you—or just made you feel a little less alone while mentally spiraling—drop a tip in the flame fund. I built this place while burning out. Now it runs on caffeine, survival grit, and scrolls of half-sane truth.