June 1, 2026

Success that Didn't Happen Overnight

The next time you’re tempted to say, “Damn, must be nice,” you might want to stop and consider what it took to get there.

What you’re seeing today didn’t happen overnight, and it certainly didn’t happen by accident.

It didn’t come from working an 8-to-5 and forgetting about it when the day was over.

It didn’t come from spending every evening parked on the couch watching TV.

It didn’t come from sleeping in every Saturday.

It didn’t come from doing the bare minimum, calling in whenever things got difficult, or being content with staying exactly where we were.

It came from years of getting up before the sun and going to bed long after everyone else.

It came from 12, 14, and 15 hour days when nobody was watching.

It came from working weekends when everyone else was relaxing.

It came from consistency. Not for a week. Not for a month. For years.

It came from picking one dream, one goal, and continuing to build on it year after year instead of constantly starting over.

It came from taking advantage of opportunities to improve our situation when they came along. While other people were spending every extra dollar on vacations, new toys, or things they wanted right now, we were often reinvesting in our future and making decisions that would create a better life later.

It came from taking risks, making sacrifices, and carrying responsibilities that most people never see.

It came from missed family events, sleepless nights, stress, worry, and continuing to push forward anyway.

It came from looking at where we were and asking ourselves, “How do we make tomorrow better than today?” Then doing the work required to make it happen.

What people often see is the result. They see the house, the business, the retirement, the lifestyle, or the success. What they don’t see are the decades of effort that came before it.

They don’t see the setbacks, the failures, the years of uncertainty, the sacrifices, or the discipline it took to keep going when quitting would have been easier.

So before you say, “Must be nice,” remember that what looks like luck from the outside is often the result of years of hard work, consistency, discipline, and choices made behind the scenes.

Most success stories aren’t built on luck. They’re built one decision, one sacrifice, and one long day at a time.

So yes, it is nice. But it wasn’t always. There were a lot of years when it was exhausting, stressful, and uncertain. The difference is we kept going anyway. And looking back now, it was absolutely worth every bit of the hard work it took to get here.


Not Every Problem Is Yours To Carry Or Yours To Solve

The Size of My Circle


I think I finally figured something out at 61 years old that probably should have occurred to me somewhere around 30.

Not everything deserves a front-row seat in my life.

Up until recently and for years, I’ve carried things that didn’t belong to me. Friends’ problems. Other people’s bad decisions. Political arguments. Sports losses. Family drama. Complete strangers on the internet who are apparently wrong about everything. And for what?

The Oklahoma City Thunder lose a series, and somehow I’m walking around like I personally missed free throws in the fourth quarter. A friend can’t get their life together after the 472nd piece of advice I have given, and somehow I’m sitting there worrying about it more than they are. Someone disagrees with my political views? Well, imagine that. In a country with over 300 million people, apparently a few of them think differently than I do. Who knew?

The older I get, the more I realize that every one of us lives inside a much smaller space than we think. My space is my marriage. My kids. My grandkids. My family. My home. My peace. That’s my space. Everything outside of that circle gets less and less control over my happiness.

Now, don’t misunderstand me. I can still care. I can listen to a friend. I can offer advice. I can cheer for my team. I can vote. I can have opinions. But 'caring' and 'carrying' are two different things.

Somewhere along the way, I started carrying things that were never mine to carry. I can’t make people make better decisions. I can’t force someone to be happy. I can’t make people agree with me. I can’t fix every problem I see. And honestly? Most of those things wouldn’t change my life anyway. The world keeps turning whether I spend three hours stressing about it or not. I’ve also realized something that feels almost rebellious to admit: I don’t need to feel guilty for being content.

That’s a strange thing, isn’t it?

Sometimes people act like if someone else is struggling, you’re supposed to struggle too. As if happiness is something you should apologize for. 

No thank you

I survived the hard years, the broke years, the stressful years, the exhausting years, the “Lord, if one more thing happens…” years. I’m not going to apologize because I’m finally comfortable in the space I’ve created. The truth is, most of us make mountains out of things that never actually climb into our own yard. We borrow trouble. We rehearse disasters. We argue with imaginary people. We carry burdens that belong to somebody else. And then we wonder why we’re tired.

These days, I’m trying something different. If it’s inside my circle, I’ll give it my attention. If it’s outside my circle, I’ll give it perspective. That doesn’t mean I don’t care. It just means I finally understand the difference between caring about something and allowing it to steal my peace.

And honestly? 

My peace is starting to feel a lot more valuable than being upset about things I was never in control of in the first place.

Creating A Home Where Grandchildren Feel Loved

The other day my granddaughter said something that stopped me in my tracks. She told me she likes coming to my house because “it’s ready.”

At first, I wasn’t exactly sure what she meant. Ready for what? Then she explained. My house has snacks. It has beds for them. It has toys waiting for them. There are toothbrushes in the bathroom. There is a special silk lovey that belongs only to Evelyn. There is a crib ready for the baby. There is even a high chair waiting at the table. In her little mind, all of those things added up to one simple conclusion: Lolly’s house is ready. 

I don’t think she realized how much that simple statement meant to me. Children don’t define love the way adults do. They don’t measure it by expensive gifts, big vacations, or elaborate plans. They measure it by belonging.

A favorite snack in the pantry. A toothbrush that stays there. A bed waiting when they’re tired. A special lovey that nobody else gets to use. A high chair already pulled up to the table. What she was really saying was that she knows there’s a place for her here, and she feels welcome here.

As grandparents, we spend years creating spaces for the people we love. We stock the snacks, buy the extra toothbrushes, save the favorite blankets, keep the toy box full, and make room for one more crib and one more high chair. Most of the time we don’t think much about it. We just do it. But hearing her describe my home as “ready” made me realize something. What I’ve really been creating all these years isn’t a house. It’s a place where my grandchildren know they are expected, welcomed, and loved.

And if someday the thing they remember most is that Lolly’s house was always ready for them, I think that’s a pretty good legacy to leave behind.

Adult Friendships Need Different expectations

Maybe this is an unpopular opinion, but at 61 years old, “ride-or-die friendship” is no longer in my job description.

In fact, I think ride-or-die is a phrase that belongs to high school, college, and those years when you’re a young single mom trying to survive life together.

Back then, your friends were your village. You talked every day. You knew every detail of each other’s lives. You’d show up with wine, tissues, a casserole, bail money, or all four if necessary.

But somewhere between raising four children, surviving decades of marriage, running a business, becoming a grandmother, and figuring out where I left my reading glasses for the third time today (they were on my head, by the way), life changed.

My ride-or-die became my family. My husband. My children. Their spouses. My grandchildren.

That’s my ride-or-die crew.

Those are the people I’m building memories with, spending holidays with, worrying about, celebrating with, and showing up for at 2 a.m. if needed.

That’s not because I don’t value my friendships. I absolutely do. I love my friends. I enjoy lunch with them. I enjoy talking with them. I enjoy hearing about their lives.

But friendship and ride-or-die are not the same thing.

I’m not putting a friend’s problems ahead of my family, and I’m certainly not taking on another adult’s financial burdens as my responsibility. I can care about someone without carrying their life on my back.

At this stage of life, I’m not looking to take on the role of caretaker, fixer, or emotional lifeline for another adult.

I know that sounds harsh, but let’s be honest.

Some people are perpetually in crisis. Every month is an emergency. Every week is a disaster. Every conversation is a complaint. Every solution has a reason it won’t work.

At some point, that’s not a rough season.

That’s just their life.

And while I can listen, encourage, and support, I cannot become a full-time member of someone else’s rescue team.

The truth is that once you marry, that person becomes your ride-or-die. Together you build a family of your own and your emotional energy becomes valuable.

You start paying attention to where it goes.

You realize that every hour spent trying to fix someone who doesn’t want to be fixed is an hour you could have spent with your spouse, your children, your grandchildren, your hobbies, or simply enjoying the peaceful life you’ve worked hard to build.

I don’t need a ride-or-die friend.

I need friends who can meet me for lunch and pay their own tab. Friends who can laugh. Friends who can celebrate good things. Friends who occasionally complain because they’re human, but who also know how to enjoy life. Friends who understand that friendship is part of my life—not the center of it.

At this point, I’m not building my world around friendships anymore.

I’m maintaining friendships around the world I’ve already built.

And that world is pretty full.

It includes a husband I’ve shared decades with, four children, their spouses, grandchildren who think I’m far more entertaining than I actually am, and a life I’ve spent years creating.

That’s my ride-or-die crew.

Everyone else gets a valued place in my life, but they’re not sitting in the driver’s seat.

That position has already been filled.