Cindy

A baboon in Namibia and the small things that carry us through


Every day, for a long stretch of time, I watched videos of a baboon living on a farm in Namibia.

At lunch. In bed at night. In the quiet minutes between things.

Her name was Cindy.

People who knew her said she ran the place.

She had the personality of someone who believed the entire farm existed primarily to serve her snacks.

And in many ways, it was the center of her world — the place where her story began.

She lived her whole life on a farm in Namibia where the Lambrechts family care for rescued animals. In 1994, a neighbor found an orphaned baby baboon and asked Barista Lambrechts — a young newlyed at the time — if she would take her in. 
 
She did.

They named her Cindy, after Cindy Crawford. Barista would be her mother for the next thirty-one years.

A few years after her arrival, Barista welcomed twin sons who grew up alongside Cindy, a baboon sister woven into their childhood. One of them, Ruben, would eventually become the one who shared Cindy with the internet.

That’s how millions of us met her.

Including me, sitting thousands of miles away in New York.

The first time I ever saw Cindy, she was sitting on a rock eating.

A large bug scurried up near her food. Without even pausing, she picked it up and tossed it aside.

Then she did it again.

It was such a casual, efficient reaction that I immediately understood something important about Cindy: whatever else was happening on that farm, her snacks were non-negotiable.

I replayed the video, laughing. And then I clicked follow.

Soon enough, the videos became part of my daily routine. I watched them all, sometimes more than once.

Cindy in the bath, calmly eating toothpaste off her toothbrush. Cindy stuffing her cheeks full of food, frantic and fast. Cindy swatting at animals (and humans) when they forgot the rules. Cindy grunting the instant she heard the word "happies," the Afrikaans word for "snack."

Later on, the videos looked a little different.

Cindy went blind from an infection in 2023, but blindness didn’t soften her personality in the slightest. If anything, it made her more impressive. She navigated the farm with total confidence, recognizing voices and footsteps, moving easily between the spaces she knew best, sleeping in her little princess tent or squeezing herself into her outdoor house.

And guarding her food like a professional bodyguard.

The best thing about Cindy was that she absolutely refused to share it.

She never had babies of her own, but every baby animal that arrived on the farm became hers. She would scoop them up, carry them around, sometimes drop them unceremoniously, and generally treat them like temporary children.

She was a natural mother: tender when it mattered, protective when it counted, strict when she needed to be. One minute she would be carrying a tiny animal around like it belonged to her, the next she would be firmly reminding everyone that her food was not communal property.

But once a baby was old enough to develop opinions about snacks, the relationship changed.

Near her food, Cindy had boundaries.

My favorite video shows a warthog wandering over, sniffing toward her banana. Cindy senses him immediately. Her eyes grow wide. In one swift movement, she grabs him by the folds of his neck and brings him straight down to the ground. Then she holds him there, thrashing him just enough to make her point.

It looks less like an animal scuffle and more like an elite wrestling move.

The warthog backs off immediately.

Lesson learned... for a little while, anyway.

There are dozens of videos like that. Maybe hundreds.

Sometimes she would just sit in the sun, her round little body settled comfortably, her knees propped up with one arm resting across them. Her hair would blow in the wind as she casually pulled up handfuls of grass to eat. Millions of people watched those quiet moments through a screen, smiling at the smallest things she did. 

She had no idea.

Over time, watching Cindy became a routine. I knew her habits, the sound of Ruben’s voice in the background, the way she tore open a banana with her hands, the little grunt she made whenever someone mentioned food. I started saving my favorite clips to my phone.

I left comments all the time.

Eventually, Facebook gave me a “Top Fan” badge next to my name: “Team Ruben,” it said.

I defended Cindy regularly in the comment sections. If someone called her ugly, I argued back. If someone questioned the family or didn’t understand her story, I explained it. I answered questions from strangers like I worked there.

How did they get her?
How did she lose her sight?

The internet does strange things to the boundaries between observer and participant.

You start by watching.

And then one day you realize you’ve been quietly defending a baboon from strangers on the internet like she’s a relative.

The first time Ruben liked one of my comments, I noticed it immediately. It felt ridiculous and exciting at the same time. The only time he replied to me directly felt even stranger.

To me, they were celebrities.

A few days before Christmas, someone who knew how much I loved Cindy ordered a gift that surprised me.

A personalized Cameo video from Ruben and Cindy.

Ruben said they had just woken up. He’d heard that I loved Cindy and that I was her "number one social media fan." He joked that it was a pity Cindy hadn’t invited me to her birthday, that it would have been "awesome."

A few weeks earlier she had turned thirty-one. They ordered a cake modeled after her. During the celebration, she ripped off the fondant tail and started eating it while they were still filming.

In the Cameo, Cindy sat beside Ruben, her little diagonal snout pointed toward the camera, her dainty pink eyelids blinking, tired but alert. At one point, she made a soft grunt.

For a minute and twenty-four seconds, the screen felt a little less like a screen.
Like the distance between us had briefly disappeared.

By then, the farm already felt strangely familiar to me.

At some point I realized I had done something slightly absurd.

I had looked up the farm.

They allow visitors to stay there and interact with the animals. I looked at the accommodations, the cost, the flight routes from New York to Namibia. I studied the travel time like it might someday become a real plan.

I imagined sitting in the grass next to Cindy.

Spending the afternoon beside her, watching her supervise the farm. 

Feeding her happies from my hand, watching her pocket every bit of it in her cheeks.

I imagined it enough times that it started to feel like a future memory, even though I knew it probably wouldn’t happen. But I thought about it anyway.

Because in some small way, she saved me.

I discovered Cindy during one of the hardest periods of my life.

I was in the middle of divorce. Moving. Trying to figure out how to rebuild a life that suddenly looked nothing like the one I had expected.

Everything felt unstable.

But every day, there she was.

A blind baboon on a farm in Namibia, confidently running the place and body-slamming warthogs who didn’t respect her snacks.

For reasons I probably didn’t fully understand at the time, she made me laugh on days when not much else did.

Watching her became a small, reliable pocket of joy in the middle of a season that felt otherwise heavy. And sometimes, during hard stretches, small things carry more weight than you expect.

For a long time, I kept watching her the same way I always had: every day, on repeat. 

Then, in late December 2025, Cindy died, surrounded by the family who had raised her. She was thirty-one — a remarkable age for a baboon.

When the post appeared announcing Cindy’s death, I remember just staring at the screen for a while, trying to take in what it meant. I felt a wave of sadness that was hard to explain to anyone who hadn’t spent years watching her videos. I mourned her like she was family. 

For a while afterward, when old clips of Cindy showed up in my feed, I’d feel my throat tighten unexpectedly.

A friend of their family later made a music video in her memory. A slideshow of moments from her life on the farm accompanied by a beautiful song about her.

I cried. Tears streaming down my face, mourning Cindy… a creature I hadn’t really known, but somehow still knew.

When the family held a live memorial online, I stepped away from work for a few minutes just to watch it.

I thought about the Cameo video a lot after that, too. I wondered if it might have been one of the last they’d recorded. I felt lucky it had arrived when it did.

After Cindy’s death, Ruben and his family began raising funds for Cindy’s Sanctuary, a project to rescue orphaned baby baboons in her honor.

I donated ten dollars.

Ten dollars isn’t a lot of money. But I’m a single mother with one income, and I don’t usually feel compelled or called to donate to things online.

This felt different. 

So I sent the money and left a short note. It didn't feel like much at the time — small things rarely do until later — but for me, it was a thank you. To Cindy. To the Lambrechts family. 

It felt like a small payment toward something intangible. Toward the hours and weeks and months of joy that Cindy (and Ruben) had quietly delivered through my phone without even knowing.

I think what fascinates me most about Cindy is not just her life on a farm in Namibia.

It’s the strange web of connection around her.

A baboon raised by a woman named Barista.
Filmed by a man who grew up calling her his sister.
Watched daily by millions of people scattered across continents.

People like me, sitting somewhere across the world, laughing at a warthog getting tackled out of a food bowl by a beloved baboon who was, frankly, a legend.

The internet often feels chaotic, loud, and exhausting.

But sometimes it does something small and remarkable.

It lets a baboon on another continent become part of someone’s ordinary day.

And Cindy was part of mine.

It’s strange how someone you’ve never met can leave a mark like that. And these days, the world feels a little less bright without her in it.

I still have dozens of her videos and photos saved on my phone. My favorites, the ones I go back to time and again.

Cindy chattering her teeth excitedly when Ruben came near, or when she was holding one of her babies. Cindy drinking tea from a mug like the queen she knew she was. Cindy sounding almost like she was laughing when someone tickled her.

Cindy feeling objects carefully in her hands before deciding what to do with them — a large plush banana, for instance, briefly inspected and then tossed aside. Cindy lying on a blanket after anesthesia, eyes closed, still chewing a banana like nothing out of the ordinary had happened.

And then there were the sneak attacks. An animal would walk past minding its own business and suddenly, Cindy would grab it by the tail, gathering it up in her arms to hold onto. Donald, a very large cow who towered over her, once tried to share her food. Cindy grabbed his tail aggressively and held on like she was correcting him.

And that was Cindy. Fearless. Completely unimpressed by size differences. Entirely committed to protecting her snacks.

Sometimes I scroll back through those clips and watch them again.

Cindy tearing open a banana. Cindy guarding her happies. Cindy correcting animals twice her size.

And every time I see her, I still can’t help but smile.

Recent Reads: January + February 2026

Recent Reads Header

January and February were heavy on thrillers, with one romance mixed in for variety. My reading stack was full of dark secrets, twisted situations, and plenty of suspense, with several books pulling me in right from the start. A few landed more in the middle of the road for me, while others stood out with especially gripping twists. All in all, it was a solid start to the reading year (even if I haven't quite hit a five-star read just yet). 

📊Reading Stats

Books Read: 7
Genres: 

    Fiction (7): Thriller (6) ◦ Romance (1) 

    Nonfiction 0
Formats: Print (5) ◦ eBook (2)
Sources: Library (5) ◦ Netgalley (2)
Average Rating: 3.29 stars
Yearly Goal: 7 / 100

7%

📖Book Reviews

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📘Room For Rent

Author: Noelle Ihli

Genre: Fiction ◦ Thriller

Publication: 2023

Format & Source: Print ◦ Library

Rating: ★★★☆☆

With one semester of college left, Nya answers an ad for a cheap off-campus room rental and moves into a rundown house she already regrets choosing. As unsettling things start happening around the house, she begins to suspect her strange roommate, Sidney, and realizes the situation may be far more dangerous than she thought.  

I’ve read a few of Noelle Ihli’s books now, and I’d place her in the category of solid but middle-of-the-road thriller writers for me. I generally enjoy her books enough that I plan to read them all, but they don’t usually blow me away. That ended up being the case with Room for Rent as well.

The premise was interesting and there were moments that pulled me in, but some of the situations and characters felt a little off. The pacing also leaned slow, and it wasn’t a book I found myself rushing to pick back up. That said, when I was reading it, it was engaging enough to keep me curious about where things were going.

If you’re looking to try this author, I’d actually recommend starting with Ask for Andrea, which is still my favorite of hers so far.

⚡ Quick Take: An interesting premise and a decent thriller, but not one of Ihli’s standout reads for me.
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📘The Tenant

Author: Freida McFadden

Genre: Fiction ◦ Thriller

Publication: 2025

Format & Source: eBook ◦ Netgalley

Rating: ★★★☆☆

After losing his job, Blake Porter rents out a room in his brownstone to the seemingly perfect Whitney. Strange things begin happening in the house, and as Blake grows increasingly suspicious of his new tenant, his fiancée dismisses his concerns. Secrets surface, tension builds, and the situation spirals into a twist-filled psychological game.

I’m always excited to pick up a Freida McFadden book because I know exactly what I’m getting: a fast, clipped thriller that keeps the pages turning and usually delivers a few solid shocks along the way. The Tenant felt slightly different right away since it’s written from a male perspective, which we don’t often see from her, but the familiar McFadden rhythm still worked.

The chapters flew by, and it stayed in my head even when I wasn’t actively reading. The twists were genuinely surprising, although I did start to sense one of them coming before the reveal. A few moments stretched believability just enough to pull me out of the story, and overall it didn’t quite hit the level of her strongest books for me.

Even when a Freida book isn’t a personal favorite, it’s hard to deny how readable and addictive her writing is. This landed as a solid, entertaining thriller. It was easy to devour, just not a standout in her catalog.

⚡ Quick Take: A fast, addictive thriller with solid twists, but not one of McFadden's strongest or most believable.
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📘His and Hers

Author: Alice Feeney

Genre: Fiction ◦ Thriller

Publication: 2020

Format & Source: Print ◦ Library

Rating: ★★★

When a woman is murdered in the small town of Blackdown, journalist Anna Andrews is sent back to cover the story, in the same town where her ex-husband, Detective Jack Harper, is leading the investigation. Told from both of their perspectives, the case exposes buried secrets and shifting suspicions as the truth becomes harder and harder to pin down.

This was my first Alice Feeney novel, and I regret waiting this long. I actually started watching the Netflix adaptation of this first, and watched the opening episode before realizing it was based on this book. I immediately paused the show so I could read the story before continuing. Unfortunately, someone on Facebook spoiled the ending for me anyway, which was frustrating.

Even knowing the twist ahead of time, I still thoroughly enjoyed this. The first portion moved a little slowly, but once the second half kicked in, I couldn’t read it fast enough. The tension builds steadily, and the dual perspectives keep you questioning everything. Anna in particular felt fully developed and layered in a way that made the emotional undercurrent hit harder.

It’s dark, sharp, and packed with twists. Spoiler and all, it still worked... and that says a lot. I’m officially on board to read more from Feeney.

⚡ Quick Take: A dark, twist-heavy thriller that delivers even if you accidentally know the ending.

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📘What Happened to Nina?

Author: Dervla McTiernan

Genre: Fiction ◦ Thriller

Publication: 2024

Format & Source: Print ◦ Library

Rating: ★★★

After Nina disappears during a weekend getaway with her boyfriend Simon — who returns home alone — suspicion quickly turns toward him. As Nina’s devastated family clashes with Simon’s wealthy, protective parents, the case explodes into a media spectacle. Told against the backdrop of social media scrutiny and public obsession, the story unravels the truth behind Nina’s disappearance while examining how tragedy can blur into entertainment.

I’m always drawn to a missing persons story, and this one absolutely delivered. The premise felt reminiscent of the real-life Gabby Petito case, which added an extra layer of tension and familiarity. The family dynamics and media frenzy were particularly compelling.

The story is told from multiple perspectives, which adds depth and lets you see the situation unfold from every side. That structure worked especially well in the second half, when the pacing really picked up and became hard to put down. It was fast, gripping, and kept me fully invested until the final reveal.

⚡ Quick Take: A timely, addictive missing persons thriller that pulls you in and doesn’t let go.
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📘Deep Cuts

Author: Sera Elly

Genre: Fiction ◦ Romance

Publication: 2026

Format & Source: eBook ◦ Netgalley

Rating: ★★★☆☆

After a drunken Vegas wedding to her brother’s best friend, Dani Cassidy’s life unravels following a tragic accident the next day. A year later, she’s still legally married to Ellis Foley and hasn’t spoken to him since. When they’re forced to reunite for a duet at her comeback festival, their chemistry reignites and sends them back on tour together. As the spotlight returns, they must decide whether their secret marriage was a mistake... or the start of something real.

This was a fun romance with more emotional depth than I expected. Beneath the secret marriage and rockstar chemistry, the story explores grief and healing in a way that felt grounded rather than overly dramatic. I also appreciated the neurodivergent representation, which added texture to the characters instead of feeling like an afterthought.

Dani and Ellis were well developed and interesting to follow. Their dynamic carried the story, especially as their history slowly resurfaced and complicated their second chance.

My only minor complaint is that while this is marketed as a standalone, it’s the third in a series. Having not read the first two books, I sometimes felt like I was missing context for side characters who had clearly been established earlier. A bit more backstory would have helped.

Overall, though, I enjoyed this one and would absolutely consider going back to read the earlier books in the series.

⚡ Quick Take: A layered, second-chance rockstar romance that balances grief and chemistry well.

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📘Revelation

Author: Carter Wilson

Genre: Fiction ◦ Thriller

Publication: 2016

Format & Source: Print ◦ Library

Rating: ★★★

When college student Harden Campbell wakes up beaten and trapped in a dirt-floor cell beside the body of his friend, he finds only one clue, a typewriter with a single instruction: “Tell me a story.” To survive, he must write about the past year at his university, where a charismatic and manipulative classmate began building a campus “religion” that slowly spiraled into something far darker and more dangerous. 

This was my second Carter Wilson book, and I’m officially a fan. The story grabbed me immediately and never really let go. I flew through it.

What made this one especially interesting for me is that it combines two things I’ve always found fascinating: cults and kidnapping. The story follows a wild but incredibly charismatic college student who starts a so-called religion on campus. Watching how quickly people get pulled in — and how things escalate from there — was both disturbing and completely compelling.

As the story unfolds, the events become increasingly bonkers, with kidnappings and manipulation pushing everything into darker territory. Beyond the thriller elements, the book really digs into the psychology behind cults and brainwashing, which made it even more fascinating to read.

I’ll definitely be picking up more of Wilson’s books after this.

⚡ Quick Take: A gripping psychological thriller about cult mentality and manipulation that’s impossible to put down.
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📘You Shouldn't Have Come Here

Author: Jeneva Rose

Genre: Fiction ◦ Thriller

Publication: 2023

Format & Source: Print ◦ Library

Rating: ★☆☆

When New York social media manager Grace Evans books a remote Wyoming ranch stay through an online rental site, she’s hoping for a quiet escape. Instead, she finds herself drawn to her mysterious host, Calvin Wells. As their connection deepens, strange things begin happening around the isolated property, and Grace starts to wonder whether she can trust the man she’s staying with... or if she made a dangerous mistake by coming at all.

I first read Jeneva Rose when The Perfect Marriage blew up a few years ago, and it was a definite standout for me. Since then, I’ve been looking forward to reading more of her books. Unfortunately, this one ended up being a bit of a flop.

The story leaned much more heavily into romance than I expected, which was disappointing since I went in anticipating a thriller. The relationship between the two main characters felt strange and rushed, with an instant-love dynamic that never really worked for me.

Beyond that, the overall vibe of the book just felt… off. The characters didn’t feel believable, and several events that happened throughout the story didn’t make much sense. It’s hard to fully explain, but the whole thing never quite came together in a way that worked.

Given how much I liked The Perfect Marriage, this one was a letdown.

Quick Take: A strange thriller-romance that never quite finds its footing.

🎖️Favorite Book of the Month

Revelation by Carter Wilson

That’s a wrap on this month’s reads — here’s to another great chapter! 📚

Fair Exchange (One Minute Memoir)


A Memoir on Unsupervised Commerce, Unauthorized Transactions, and Second Grace Economics

Setting: February 2026

Holden's school has me on speed dial this year.

His teacher calls. He’s loud. He distracts kids, trying to make them laugh. He sits on desks like he works there.

The nurse calls too. Enough that I recognize her voice immediately.

In other words, there are a wide variety of issues. But one issue comes up more than the others.

Trading.

Giving things away. Taking things back. Accepting things with the seriousness of a formal exchange.

Pencils, erasers, sharpeners. Small objects, constantly circulating through invisible childhood economies.


He’s come home with full-color printed photos of Italian Brainrot characters and Roblox screenshots, carefully cut and gifted by his best friend. These weren’t random scraps. They were offerings. Presented with intention. Received with gratitude.

One day, he came home wearing a gold chain.

It had an A dangling on it.

It wasn’t ours. We hadn’t bought it. We had never even discussed jewelry as a concept. And yet there it was, around his neck, worn with complete confidence.

We asked him where he got it.

The story was vague. Incomplete. Somehow, his teacher had helped him put it on, which raised more questions than it answered.

Mimi told him he should return it. It might be real gold, she said. It might belong to someone whose parent didn’t know it was missing, we thought.

So he brought it back to school the next day.

Problem solved.

Except that afternoon, he walked out of school wearing a gold chain again. This time, the A was gone.

Later that night, I asked him, again, how he had acquired it. This time, he had details.

He had traded a girl.

For a pencil sharpener.

He said it plainly. Logically. Like the terms were obvious. Fair. Mutually agreed upon.

And so, he kept the chain. It had made its way home twice now, not hidden in the bottom of a backpack, not smuggled past anyone's notice. We assumed, by then, it belonged to him. 

He wears it now sometimes, casually, like someone who understands his own leverage. It gives him the quiet swagger of someone who knows he's made a good deal. The chain makes him look like he's seen things.

At seven years old, Holden is running a fully independent barter system.

And apparently, pencil sharpeners are worth more than I realized.

This post is part of my One-Minute Memoir series — short reflections on small moments that still manage to say something big.

Financial Fridays: Credit Cards — Paid Off!

For years, “pay off the credit cards” lived in the back of my mind like a standing objective.

It survived budget revisions, life transitions, and entire seasons of my life. It followed me out of the old house. It outlasted the mortgage. It remained long after the student loans were gone.

I used to track everything in a series called The Debt Diaries. Every balance had a timestamp. I tracked it down to the penny. Over time, most of those categories quietly disappeared. Student loans. Personal loans. Auto loans.

But the credit cards didn’t.

They were the most volatile category. The ones that grew during instability. The ones with the highest interest. The ones that never quite felt finished.

Last month, they reached zero.

Not all my debt is gone. I still carry an auto loan and a retirement loan that I had to take out for the divorce.

But the credit cards are done. And that feels like something.

The Peak Balance

Credit card debt had been part of my financial life for years, but early 2024 marked the highest point.

By February 2024, the total had climbed to:

$26,639.94

The divorce and the months leading up to selling the house destabilized everything. Legal costs. Transition expenses. Timing gaps. Emotional fatigue. Credit cards became the buffer again.

That number wasn’t the beginning of the story.

It was the loudest point in it.

September 2024: Contained

When we sold the house in September 2024, I used a significant portion of the proceeds to reduce debt immediately. Then I called each credit card company.


I negotiated settlements.
Made lump-sum payments.
Secured 0% terms.
Closed accounts.

After everything cleared, the remaining balance was:

$6,979.04

That was what remained after the restructuring. Three cards left. Everything else was resolved and closed.

It wasn’t freedom.

But it was contained.

2025: Deliberate Progress

From that nearly $7,000 balance, 2025 became about deliberate reduction.

Two of the remaining cards were at 0% after the settlements. One still carried interest: my ESL Visa card at 15.5%.

That determined the strategy.

Minimum payments on the two 0% balances. Everything extra toward the interest-bearing card.

Not just once a month.

Weekly payments. Extra dollars whenever they were available. Small amounts sent intentionally to chip away at principal before interest could accumulate.

I did use the ESL card occasionally during the year. Life still happened. But every time I did, it immediately became the target again. Charges didn’t linger. They got folded back into the plan.

The system was simple and relentless.

Reduce interest first.
Protect progress on the others.
Keep the total trending down.

When I focus on something, I don’t dabble. I track it. I refine it. I keep pushing until it’s handled.

By the end of 2025, the balance had dropped from nearly $7,000 to just over $4,000 — roughly $2,600 reduced through steady, targeted payments.

The house sale changed the scale.
2025 proved I could execute the plan.

2026: Zero

On January 1, 2026, the remaining balances were:
 

  • Apple (0% – closed): $2,489
  • Venmo (0% – closed): $1,230
  • ESL Visa (15.5%): $599.40


Total: $4,318.40

I carried the same strategy into the new year. The 15.5% card stayed the target. Extra money immediately went toward that, and I continued to watch it shrink. 

In late February 2026, my tax refund cleared the remaining balances.

I logged in and saw:

$0.00

For years, I had imagined that moment. I pictured relief. Maybe something cinematic. A rush. A before-and-after feeling.

Instead, it was steady. Something else entirely.

I felt proud. Yes. Briefly excited. Absolutely.

But within minutes, my brain shifted. 

I changed direction almost immediately. The retirement loan was next. My focus didn’t disappear. It just moved.

 

A Different Way Forward

For years, I carried almost ten credit cards. Different balances. Different rates. Different due dates. They were background noise in every budget and every decision.

Now I’m down to one.

For the first time in a long time, I am someone without credit card debt.

That’s not just a zero balance. That’s a different posture.

I don’t plan on applying for more. I don’t want to live in revolving balances again. I want credit to be a tool, not a crutch.

I still dream of the day I’m 100% debt free. That’s been a goal for years. Now I’m one significant step closer.

 

I used to imagine this moment as a finish line of sorts. A burst of relief, something loud and unmistakable. 

 

Instead, it was quieter.

It didn’t end with fireworks. Not in the way I thought it would.

It ended with control.
That was the celebration.

Month in Review: February 2026

February 2026 in Review

February felt steadier than January. Not necessarily quieter, just more productive. There were proud parent moments, real financial progress, strong reading momentum, and a heavy dose of true crime on my screens. Winter is still winter, but this month felt like tangible forward movement.

📊 Month by the Numbers

  • Weight: ⬇️ 5.6 lbs (YTD: ⬇️ 12.2 lbs)
  • Books Read: 5 (YTD: 7)
  • Runs: 0
  • Blog Posts: 8 (YTD: 22)
  • One Minute Memoirs: 4 (YTD: 8)
  • Savings: ⬆️ $3,230
  • Debt: ⬇️ $3,981.45

Highlights

  • Wicked (again): My aunt and I saw Wicked for the third or fourth time. It’s one of my all-time favorite shows and OMG “Defying Gravity”...  straight chills every single time! Caleb went on a class field trip to see it the same night, and he liked it. Maybe not as enthusiastically as I do, but I'm glad he had the experience!
  • Leadership Award: Caleb won a leadership award at school. His teacher invited us to the assembly and we had to keep it a secret. When he walked in and saw us sitting there, he was genuinely surprised. I left work early on a Friday to be there, signed him out of school early afterward, and let him pick a celebratory treat: McDonald’s fries, just the two of us.
  • 3D printer redemption: Caleb’s replacement 3D printer arrived and we’re officially up and running. Holden has already put him in business
  • Another Bingo night: We signed up again. Caleb was frustrated when he didn’t win within the first five minutes. Holden was loud. The nacho bar, however, delivered. I keep registering us monthly — glutton for punishment?
  • Tax refund day: I anxiously awaited this one. I used it to finish paying off my credit cards and significantly boost my savings. A major milestone.
  • Health progress: This was my first full month on my new migraine regimen, specifically targeting hormonal migraines this time. I'm now on two additional migraine meds (I have an entire arsenal), and I was down to four migraines in February... not perfect, but noticeably better than January.

📚 What I Read

A strong reading month! Five books, mostly thrillers, and one clear favorite.
  • His & Hers by Alice Feeney ★★★★☆
  • What Happened to Nina? by Dervla McTiernan ★★★★☆
  • Deep Cuts by Sera Elly ★★★☆☆
  • Revelation by Carter Wilson ★★★★☆
  • You Shouldn’t Have Come Here by Jeneva Rose ★★☆☆☆
🏅 Favorite Book of the Month: Revelation
Books Read: 5
Yearly Progress: 7 / 100

🎬 What I Watched

  • TV Shows
  • The Pitt (HBO Max): I stay caught up week to week. It’s so good. (current)
  • Grey’s Anatomy (Netflix): Still deep in my rewatch era. Season one is pure MAGIC. (rewatch • s:1 e:4–9)
  • ER (HBO Max): Slowly making my way through season one. (s:1 e:12)
  • His & Hers (Netflix): Limited series adaptation of the book. (s:1 e:1–2)
  • Full House (Hulu): Another slow rewatch. (rewatch • s:1 e:1–2)
  • Documentaries & Docuseries
  • Dave Not Coming Back (Tubi, 2020): A documentary about a deep cave diving expedition that turns tragic when a diver becomes trapped underwater. Interesting in parts, but not a favorite. 2 stars
  • The Investigation of Lucy Letby (Netflix, 2026): Examines the British nurse accused of murdering infants in her care. Gripping and well done, though I’m still undecided on guilt vs. innocence. 4 stars
  • Kidnapped: Elizabeth Smart (Netflix, 2026): Revisits the 2002 abduction and investigation. Solid but not exceptional. I did learn a lot more about this case, so that was a plus. 3 stars
  • Amber: The Girl Behind the Alert (Peacock, 2023): Explores the case that led to the Amber Alert system. Interesting and informative. I had no idea where the Amber Alert came from prior to watching this. 3 stars
  • Wild Boys: Strangers in Town (Paramount+, 2026, 2 eps.): Follows two mysterious brothers who suddenly appear in a small town. I was excited for this one, but it ended up feeling odd and underwhelming. It was compelling enough, but there was just something so uncomfortable and unsettling about both of the brothers. 2 stars

Extras

  • Loved: Seeing Caleb win his award, finishing off my credit cards, and hearing “Defying Gravity” live again.
  • Sucked: Still having migraines... fewer, but not gone.
  • On the Menu: Texas Roadhouse twice (the boys love it and I can never turn down their rolls) and discovering Drizzilicious mini rice cakes.
  • Made Me Laugh: Holden confidently calling the Seahawks the “Seahorses” during the Super Bowl — and coming home from school wearing a random gold chain like he’d joined a middle school rap collective. A full saga. One Minute Memoir incoming!

Coming Up in March

March looks surprisingly quiet on my calendar, which feels rare. We have our monthly town Bingo night (yes, we’re still going), and I’ll be traveling at the end of the month for a work conference. Otherwise, I’m looking forward to a few calmer weeks. If the weather cooperates and we finally thaw out, I’d love to attempt a return to running.

What I Learned

Big milestones rarely happen all at once. They’re built in ordinary weeks: in spreadsheets, in small habits, in saying no to things you used to say yes to. February felt like proof that quiet consistency eventually turns into very visible progress.

So that’s it for me! See you next month!

The Manufacturing Department (One Minute Memoir)

A Memoir on Accidental Entrepreneurship, Unsolicited Demand, and Brotherly Obligation

Setting: February 2026

Caleb got a 3D printer for his birthday.

This is a child who already owns more technology than some small businesses. Multiple laptops. External monitors. A phone. A growing collection of cables whose purposes I do not understand and am afraid to touch.

So he didn’t ask for a printer, per se. I had just run out of increasingly advanced tech gift ideas and decided to raise the stakes myself. 

So we bought one.

We set it up together, watching instructional videos like we were assembling medical equipment. I used a screwdriver. I felt qualified and useful for approximately eleven minutes... until it jammed.

Nothing worked. Not adjusting the settings. Not turning it off and on again. Not my extremely confident belief that I knew what I was doing.

After more research, we returned it and switched to a better brand. That one worked... once we realized the filament had been feeding backward the entire time.

Suddenly, Caleb was operational.

He began taking requests.

A fidget toy for me. Doll shoes for Mimi. An axolotl, a boat, and a dog for Holden. Small plastic objects, materializing out of nothing but time and patience and melted filament. It felt like watching magic... if magic made quiet robotic noises and lived on his desk.

Then Holden asked him to print an axolotl for a friend at school.

Reasonable.

But then, on a random Monday, I came home from work and heard the printer running upstairs.

“Caleb! Are you printing something?”

He came running toward me, laughing, holding a yellow Post-it note.

It was a list.

Seven kids’ names. Plus the teacher. All written in Holden’s handwriting. All requesting their own bright blue animal — the only filament color we currently have.

MORE axolotls. Fish. A bear. A dragon for the teacher.

He had volunteered Caleb. Not asked. Not suggested. Volunteered.

He had quietly launched an entire manufacturing operation without consulting management.

Caleb stood there smiling, equal parts proud and doomed, while Holden beamed beside him, thrilled with his own efficiency.

At eleven years old, Caleb is now the sole supplier of custom blue animals for a second-grade classroom.

And Holden, apparently, is in sales.

This post is part of my One-Minute Memoir series — short reflections on small moments that still manage to say something big.