The Toxic Mom Group

Via IG The Cut

By: Gabriela Yareliz

In the pop culture news this week was Ashley Tisdale French’s The Cut article, Breaking Up With My Toxic Mom Group. She doesn’t name the members of the group but simply explains the dynamics of it and why it was time to make her exit. She must have known people would dig into her photos and try to put the pieces together. Was it necessary? I mean half of what anyone writes about isn’t. Sometimes, you just want to express yourself. I would argue, though, that it has its value. Stay with me.

I am not here to weigh all of the past feuds the alleged members of this group has had. Is Hilary Duff kind? Probably not, if we are being real. Is Mandy Moore a mean girl? I mean— this group is made up of past teen stars that probably have stunted emotional capacity- Tisdale French included. The only thing I find curious is that the women’s husbands are now speaking out and attacking Tisdale French, which, to me, feels like they are proving her point. Toxic. If they weren’t petty or toxic, they would have likely let Tisdale French take the public opinion fall alone.

What I find interesting about this conversation is that we can take the celebrity element out of this and be left with something very real— women friendships can have a thick layer of darkness to them. I personally have always found group dynamics to be toxic. Women friendship groups are things I have often observed from the outside and never understood. (Not a group person). And while so many will argue that a sisterhood is the strongest thing on the planet, I feel I have only seen the toxicity. I personally prefer friendships with men, and sadly, as you get older and people get married, it becomes harder and in some ways just simply less appropriate. It’s not the same as when you were kids. Some of my best and most pure childhood friendships were with boys. There is less of a physiological mindf*ck when you are friends with men. Things are a lot more straight forward.

In a world of Friends, Girls, Golden Girls and Sex and the City, Tisdale French brings up something we seldom talk about— how toxic a group of women can be. And I see it even in work dynamics. Women are quick and ready to tear each other down and apart. There is a power struggle there; and while men may struggle too, women lie. There is plenty of fake politeness to go around. You walk on eggshells because you often don’t know when she will strike. Perhaps, it’s a deep rooted insecurity. I don’t know. You can say this is sexist, but it’s purely based on observation. So do with it what you will. I have seen women behave in ways men do not. Fact.

When I read this piece, it reminded me of some of the toxic friendships of the past. Girls who would literally lie to their parents to get one in trouble. Girls riddled with anxiety who wanted someone to blame. I remember one of my most toxic friendships was with a pastor’s daughter. So when anything hit the fan or she went into one of her rages, even when she was lying, my parents believed her over me. That girl was unhinged and always told me I was “jealous of her.” There were times where she humiliated me in front of others for laughs. Ironically, as a kid, I knew I was not jealous of her. I thought she was literally unhinged. I also knew she was a liar. None of the adults around us understood the dynamic and the currents running through all of this.

Girls and women can be savage. They can destroy a lot in their tornado of emotions and insecurity. I think it’s something we should talk about more. To me, one of the only people who has exposed the depths of darkness is Margaret Atwood in her book Cat’s Eye (“exploring themes of identity, memory, female cruelty”). We should equip girls better to deal with the reality of the darkness and cruelty (for lack of a better word) that exists, instead of not believing them or acting like it’s normal.

Even outside of gender, there are plenty of group and friendship dynamics that are not healthy. Maybe the Tisdale French essay, despite how petty it lands, will start a conversation about how to have healthy relationships and how to know when it’s time to walk away. Life is too short to be a part of someone’s stupid power dynamic. And while you are stuck with the same people as a child, when you are an adult, you have choices. You can walk away.

People are cruel and also unwell. There is a lot of darkness out there. Lots of psychological games being played. Some people want high school forever. And there are many who feel they thrive in that. Some of us want nothing to do with it, and it’s ok to say so.

Shadows

We’re literally paying subscription fees to watch characters who represent the worst versions of ourselves.” Kelly Oxford

By: Gabriela Yareliz

Erwin McManus, the creator and author of The Seven Frequencies of Communication, has often said that when we watch modern TV shows such as Succession, what we are watching are people expressing shadow communication frequencies. It’s, more often than not, an unhealthy expression of humanity.

It makes one wonder if that fact reflects that we are darker now than ever before or if current TV is pushing us toward darker, unhealthy expressions of ourselves.

Tinx is right.

As I was riding a delayed train I had paid more for (of course— maybe this calls for a letter to the new mayor?), I heard an ad for a type of AI that (allegedly) has not eliminated God from its “worldview”. There is such a true battle for the mind out there. As always, discernment with what we see and listen to and the words we use matters. As EGW always said, “By beholding we become changed.”

Changing how people talk changes how they think,” said Lera Boroditsky. So much lends itself toward influence and manipulation.

We just pay attention to it all.

Creation

Bradley Cooper: Don’t you think if we’re doing our jobs properly, everything’s autobiographical?

Guillermo Del Toro: People say, ‘Oh, you identify with the creature.’ In the past, yes. Now I identify with the creator. I’m the antagonist of my own story, as well as the protagonist.”

On Frankenstein (Source)

By: Gabriela Yareliz

I heard somewhere that nothing is more autobiographical than fiction. When we create, I imagine most of it is a sort of reflection of us from some angle or another. A work cannot be detached from its source.

Creation is a disruption that leads to healing. In its process, we mirror the Creator Himself. Creation is a divine power.

System

The difference between people who succeed and people who struggle isn’t discipline. It’s not willpower. It’s not motivation. It’s whether they found a system that actually works or kept buying stories that just felt like they would.” Arnold Schwarzenegger

A Historic Day

By: Gabriela Yareliz

I think we all woke up knowing the world was shifting right beneath our feet.

I woke up to the headline below, and clicked into it wondering if this was real. (A sort of déjà vu for Latin America and those who know its history).

Headline screenshot.
This photo went around the world in seconds. Credit to whoever took it.

Mandoka, a Venezuelan cookbook author based out of Miami, said she was having champagne with breakfast. She also had a passionate post that articulated a lot of the mixed emotions many Latin Americans have—

Mandoka’s IG Stories.

Around noon, the President and Secretary of State were still addressing the nation.

After sunset, helicopters were hovering all over the Meatpacking District, the West Side Highway was closed. At that point, Citizen App was telling us:

From Citizen App.
No access to West Side Highway. Photo by me.

Then, in SW Brooklyn, swarms of NYPD were centered on the prison near Industry City, in Sunset Park. (Luigi, are you there?)

This was circulating on IG. Apparently, everyone wants the Nike sweater. Lord.

No one knows what will happen next or how this will unfold. Maduro is no saint, and the Venezuelans have been slaves to a disastrous system, to put it lightly. The U.S. has a way of intervening for its interests and has, at times, failed and at other times, succeeded.

Anti-war demonstrations have begun. Fighting is rampant on social media. Many want to be ideologues or listen to the ideologue, but in the end, that is never the voice that counts. It’s not the voice that should count.

The only voice that matters here is not the politician or socialist, it’s not the superpower, it’s not the military voice or the voice of a person who has benefitted from corruption or the voice of the ones privileged enough to hold views that will never touch him or her— the voice that counts is the one of the person who has been robbed by the whole system of it all. As Mandoka rightly points out, the Venezuelan people have suffered for decades. Suddenly, all eyes are on them. The question then becomes whether the U.S. will do right by them. More importantly, will the Venezuelans achieve what every human is wired for— freedom?

Waldorf Glamour

Image via Pinterest.

By: Gabriela Yareliz

Night fell on the Upper East Side. After a delicious raclette sandwich, we navigated the pockets of sidewalk ice and dark residential buildings.

We passed the new JP Morgan Chase building, which is stunning (like a monument to capitalism— it stands there with the biggest Christmas wreaths I have ever seen, ‘Happy New Year’ in every language on the wall and a giant American flag in the middle of the lobby. I digress.)

Nearby, the Waldorf Astoria sits as a portal to old New York glamour.

Photo by me.

The lights are bright, the carpet so lush we saw a woman break her heel on it. The plants are immaculate (and real), the velvet chairs are soft and the wooden details are all polished.

Photo by me.

The restaurant is glitzy. The uniforms are pure glamour. It’s quiet and dim. It made me think of Frank Sinatra, Audrey Hepburn, and Cindy Adams.

Photo by me.

Seeing so much perfection fills a person with wonder.

Photo by me.

These orchid arrangements were stunning.

Photo by me.

These elevators look like a retro tin.

Photo by me.

The high ceilings are beautiful.

While we may not have the high ceilings or legendary piano— we can borrow some pointers from the stunning old NYC glamour restored.

Image via Pinterest.

Ways to Capture Old New York Glamour:

-Think soft and lush— blankets, robes, socks, rugs, towels, napkins.

-The toilet paper with the v fold.

-Aesop or some other lovely scented soap. Intentionality with the soaps.

-No bright overhead lights. Candles, twinkle lights, sconces.

-Wood and glass that shines. (No dust in sight).

-Frank Sinatra playlist playing.

-White florals and lush greens sprinkled throughout.

-Fashion is communication. (You can never go wrong with black). Some uniforms had sequins.

-Things are not loud or fast, but it’s quiet and slow.

-Maximalism in a minimalist way.

Pia Mance via Pinterest.

For more from the timeless and iconic restoration, check out the following:

Image via Pinterest.

Wishing you a shimmer of glamour as you start this year. ✨

Image via Pinterest.

Wintering Reminder

“Plants and animals don’t fight the winter; they don’t pretend it’s not happening and attempt to carry on the same lives that they lived in the summer. They prepare.

They adapt. They perform extraordinary acts of metamorphosis to get them through. But that’s where the transformation occurs.

Once we stop wishing it were summer, winter can be a glorious season in which the world takes on a sparse beauty and even the pavements sparkle. It’s a time for reflection and recuperation, for slow replenishment, for putting your house in order.” Katherine May, Wintering

Tomorrow, I will be putting my house in order! A bit of winter prep and clean never hurt anyone.