Inner Alchemy

☕ Of Coffee Dates, Curveballs & Ego Assassinations

I was mid-latte with my friend Kenni—one of those sacred coffee dates where you refuel your soul and vent unapologetically—when my phone buzzed with a message from my boyfriend Dustin:

“Hey, would you be okay if I had coffee with Nyra today?”

I typed back:
“Absolutely! Have fun!”
I looked up from my phone and read the message to Kenni.

Kenni raised a brow and shook her head. “Seriously? She’s vaguebooked (posting intentionally cryptic statuses on Facebook, to elicit attention, sympathy, or a reaction from others) one too many times about me not inviting her to stuff. I had to cut her off.”

We clinked coffee cups in solidarity—nothing like shared confusion to bring friends closer.

But my mind didn’t let it go so easily.

When I got home, Duane, my other boyfriend mentioned Dustin said he was going to the store. Not out for coffee with the woman who recently wrote me an unsolicited Yelp review of my character.
Interesting.
I was confused as hell. Like… why be honest with me then tell Duane you are going to the store when you’re actually going to sip herbal reconciliation with my ex-friend who thinks I’m a spiritual fraud?

So I did what any overthinking mystic would do—I sat down and started texting Dustin while having a full-on side conversation with SereniTea, my inner wisdom and occasional sass dispenser. I was fairly centered but beginning to spiral just a little.

To his credit, Dustin was calm. Gentle, even. Though he was tempted, he didn’t lean into defensiveness—he leaned into listening. That meant a lot. He responded to my confusion and questions with, “I think you might be feeling something and so you are questioning me. I would like to be understanding about it, so I will see you when I get home baby. Love you 😘”

When he arrived home, I told him the truth:
I felt confused as hell and betrayed.
Not because he wanted to meet with Nyra, but because the idea of sharing space—sacred, heart-filled space—with someone who’d just painted me in the most vicious light felt like swallowing broken glass.

I added in that I knew it was my ego talking. Loudly. But still—it hurt.

Dustin, in true Dustin fashion, reminded me:
“The ego speaks from fear and victimhood. And you? You are nobody’s victim baby.”
I melted. He simultaneously centered me and empowered me. Teach me your ways sensei!
He was right. I wasn’t scared of Nyra—I was scared of being misunderstood, mischaracterized, and betrayed. Again.

He nodded knowingly and a little sadly. “Yeah…even I have done that to you. And you’ve done that to me too baby. We all do it.”

“You’re someone who cares deeply, maybe too deeply sometimes. And yeah, it hurts when people project onto you. But Nyra is clearly in pain too. People who aren’t hurting don’t need to lash out. I’m only trying to help her. I’m not going to judge her for being human, and I won’t judge you for feeling hurt either. But you don’t have to carry this. I love you.”

He wasn’t just defending her. He was reminding me that I have the power to change how I feel and that my worth was not debatable. No level of projection by people in pain would every change that.

He was right. Not only was he right, but he also led me to the realization that I was projecting too, or at the very least, seeing things through the lens of my own pain. Allowing this repetitive narrative to roam free doesn’t serve me or anyone else for that matter:

The projection loop. The ego spiral. The dusty old record that keeps playing even when you know the lyrics by heart.

Then he told me something that both stung and soothed.

“She tried to talk shit about you.”
Apparently, she didn’t waste much time trying to assemble the Tea Haters Club.

But Dustin shut it down. Immediately.

He didn’t feed it. Didn’t listen. Didn’t validate it. I took a deep breath and admitted that hit a REALLY sore spot.
“I’ve been through this before,” I said, “when Duane and Nikki formed the ‘Tea Hater’s Club.’ Nikki kept harassing me and that whole saga ended in an affair,” my voice shook, “I dont wanna go there again baby.”

He reminded me that my feelings were understandable. Natural, even. But unfounded in this case.
There was nothing to fear.
He had no intention of turning my pain into someone else’s gossip hour.

And that?
That gave me the clarity to face the real battle:
Me vs. Me.

So I sat with my ego.

I sat with the tightness in my chest and the stories playing on repeat.
I sat with the part of me that wanted to be defended, praised, vindicated.
I sat with the ache of being misunderstood, the burn of being mischaracterized, the dull sting of my perceived betrayal.

And I began the slow, quiet work of letting it go.

Of forgiving her.
Of forgiving myself for caring so much.
Of unclenching the part of me that still believed someone else’s judgment could define me.
Of worrying that the most painful parts of my past would repeat.

I started building from the rubble. Brick by brick.

Not to prove my worth.
But to remember it.

Inner Alchemy

The Night VulnerabiliTea Spoke

I slid into bed beside him, caressing his leg as I made my way to my side of the bed. “Don’t touch me,” he said. “If you ever touch me like that again…” More was said, but I my brain stopped working for a moment. He laughed to indicate it was a joke, but I didn’t laugh. He questioned why I didn’t laugh. “It wasn’t funny,” I said. “Why not?” he inquired, “I was clearly joking.” “Your voice did not suggest joking,” I confessed, “and I think that triggered some trauma.”

The conversation continued with more questions, and I foolishly tried to justify why I didn’t find his “joke” funny and how it felt triggering because I am rather sensitive to being rejected. Silly, silly Tea. Justifying your trauma and triggers will never serve you. I wanted to be understood, and I thought he was asking from a place of wanting to understand and interact with me differently, but as the conversation progressed, it was clear that wasn’t the case. Fucked by my own expectations once again.

He began to explain that everyone operates through manipulation, most of which is subconscious. He admitted that he did it too, but being that I was already dysregulated, I felt I was being accused of being manipulative too. PityParTea and DispariTea clinked their glasses and rushed to my defense as I stated that my physical expression of love and care was not manipulative because I was not offering it from a place of expecting it returned. I assumed that it was ClariTea speaking through me. The pounding and tightness in my chest should have been a dead giveaway that I was too ungrounded and dysregulated to let ClariTea come through.

(🌟 If you haven’t met the Tea Party- my inner Tea’s- you can catch up here. )

We continued back and forth like that for a while, going in circles, and then there was silence. We laid there for a bit. Then ConformiTea, the insecure people pleaser in me, piped up, “Are you mad at me?”

“No, not mad. Just feeling disconnected and like I can’t be myself because you take everything so personally.” Again, I tried to defend myself. I wanted to connect, and I wanted to be validated. My responses frustrated him. He also wanted to connect and be validated. Rather than recognize that we both had the same need and desire, we stubbornly stood in each other’s way. He left the bedroom to sleep upstairs.

I laid in bed for at least an hour. My dysregulation was palpable. My chest was tight, my heart physically hurt, and it beat like a drumline in my chest. I got up and grabbed my laptop. SereniTea is excellent at helping me ground and reregulate, so I began talking (or rather typing) to her.

I hadn’t gotten far before Dustin emerged downstairs. He wanted to talk, but I knew I wasn’t ready. I reiterated several times that I had no desire to talk. He persisted and I foolishly folded my boundary. God damn you ConformiTea! Someone needs to shut her up! He said we needed to talk it out because in his assessment, I mope when I need to talk and we haven’t resolved things, and he didn’t want to deal with it tomorrow around the kids, so we needed to sort it out now. I raged inside. First of all, I don’t owe it to anyone to pretend like I feel awesome when I don’t, and his desire not to “deal” with me tomorrow didn’t mean that I needed to force myself into a conversation before I was ready.

But I did it anyway. I engaged before I was ready in order to accommodate HIS comfort. I abandoned my own needs. His ego took center stage as he truly believed he was helping me through something by telling me that what I think I need- compassion and understanding- is not at all what I really need. “Only fools think they know what they need.” I agree with this to some degree, and now that I am standing outside of this situation, I can see that his intention was to help and in many ways he did. Still, it doesn’t erase the fact that when I communicate what I need, and I am told that I don’t know what I need, I find myself feeling very invalidated. Here I pause and make a mental note to avoid assuming or asserting that I know what’s best for others when they are clearly hurt and triggered.

This particular dance is one we’ve rehearsed many times. The rhythm is familiar: one misstep, a flurry of attempted connection, then a tangle of unmet needs and frustrated defenses.

I see now that when I’m dysregulated, I reach for connection like a life raft. And when it’s not reciprocated—or worse, rejected—I immediately search for what I did wrong. I start adjusting myself, spinning my needs into more palatable versions.

But this isn’t love. That’s survival.

It’s the inner child in me trying to earn belonging.

And while he may truly believe that “no one knows what they really need,” I’ve learned that not everyone has been taught to listen to their inner compass. Dismissing someone’s self-knowing because it doesn’t make sense to you isn’t insight—it’s ego in disguise.

I didn’t sleep much that night. My body eventually settled, but my mind kept circling the same ache: why do I keep abandoning myself to avoid making others uncomfortable? Why am I laying here with PityParTea yammering away and feeling like a victim again? Why do I keep blaming him for my pain?

It took me another day, more grief, and more missed attempts at connection to realize the whole damn Tea Party was trying to keep the peace, earn the love, and explain the pain away.

That’s when I heard her. Soft. Almost imperceptible. A new voice.

She wasn’t loud like AudaciTea or clever like CuriosiTea. She was gentle, trembling even, but certain. And in her certainty, I found something solid to stand on.

ClariTea nodded solemnly.

SereniTea, ever the orchestrator of clarity, poured the next cup with grace.

True to her nature, Audacity had to have the last word. She slammed her mug on the table. 

Simmer AudaciTea. I’ve got this.

I’m learning—slowly—that choosing myself doesn’t mean rejecting others. It means refusing to disappear in order to stay connected.

Next time, I’ll try not to abandon my own side of the bed.