A Day That Started With Work
December 23, 2025 was mostly a day of cleaning.
The productive kind. The kind you can see when you step back.
I deep-cleaned the kitchen. Got Isabella's room organized and reset. Even made progress in my own bedroom. It felt good—like reclaiming space, order, and a bit of control before Christmas arrives.
And then... the kitchen was destroyed again.
Baking happened. Which somehow always turns into every surface being used, every dish left behind, and no cleanup afterward. It's a pattern I've noticed for a long time. Any time my mother cooks or bakes—no matter how small the meal—the mess remains. And eventually, I clean it.
I often feel like I'm constantly resetting the house for everyone else, while my own effort disappears the moment I turn around.
It's exhausting.
A Short Plan That Didn't Stay Short
Later, I picked up Eve.
This wasn't something I advertised at home. I kept it simple and moved quietly. The plan was small: McDonald's. She's been talking about a chicken wrap, and I thought an hour out would be harmless.
I asked her mom to watch the kids briefly.
But once we were out, plans expanded the way they sometimes do. A stop at Five Below. Then Walmart, since it was close. What was supposed to be an hour turned into closer to two.
And with it came spending.
More than I planned. More than I should have. I even postponed a couple bills—something I almost never do. That part sits heavy with me. I don't like trading stability for impulse, even when the impulse is connection.
The Cost of Saying Yes
After dropping Eve off, I picked up my cousin, who also needed to go to Walmart. More spending. More small decisions adding up faster than I expected.
Back home, I wrapped gifts—mostly things headed to Eve's house. My mother ordered pizza, even though money is tight. I didn't have the energy to argue.
At that point, I was already mentally drained.
Running Late, Again
Later that evening, I picked up Kayla and stoped to grab a gift card meant for Eve's parents. What should have been a quick stop turned into a long one. The system didn't cooperate. Time slipped. Frustration built.
By the time everything was finally sorted, I was already late.
We made it over anyway. Isabella and I exchanged gifts with them and dropped off a few extras for Christmas Day.
Gifts, and Mixed Feelings
Isabella received a Barbie Veterinarian and was genuinely happy.
I gave Eve a SpongeBob shirt that reads, "Can I be excused for the rest of my life?" — something that felt oddly fitting.
I also gave The Sister a graded buffalo nickel, knowing she collects coins.
That one may have been too much. I also included like 4 or 5 extra gifts for The Sister to open on Christmas Day.
We're not on speaking terms again, and I know I went overboard. Part of me still hopes kindness might bridge something logic never seems to. Part of me knows better.
The Pain That Still Lingers
The truth I don't say out loud often enough is this: I still have feelings for The Sister. And it still hurts.
Every time we talk, I try to ask questions—not to accuse, but to understand. The logic never lands the way I hope it will. It turns into a fight. I become the problem. And then I'm blocked again.
I don't want to be right.
I just want to be understood.
I can't help wondering how different life might have felt if I had been treated the way she's treating The Other Guy. That thought lingers longer than I want it to.
Ending the Day Without Energy Left
Isabella and I got home around 8:30.
I looked around at what still needed to be done and didn't have it in me to keep going. That means Christmas Eve will be heavier—more cleaning, more wrapping, less margin.
Tonight, I chose rest over completion.
Some days are about progress.
Some days are about survival.
Tomorrow will be busy enough.