Monday, December 08, 2025

Garbage, Grievance, and the Gospel of Cruelty

 



Garbage, Grievance, and the Gospel of Cruelty

Enduring the bully-in-chief. Again.

JoJoFromJerz

Dec 8

 

 

 

I’ve spent my whole life learning the language of bullies. Not from books or movies, but from the way my small body learned to brace before my mind even understood the danger. From the way a room could shift, sharpen, turn hostile without a single word spoken. Bullies raised me, shaped me, tried to script my story before I ever got the chance to write it myself. Their fingerprints are pressed into parts of me I’ve spent decades trying to soften.

And a few days ago, Trump did what he always does — bullied, demeaned, dehumanized — but this time it hit a place in me I thought had finally gone still. Harsher. Deeper. Like someone pressed a thumb into an old bruise that never fully faded. He spat out two cruelties without blinking — the R-word degrading jab tossed off like a bored reflex, and then, half-asleep in that cabinet room, he still found the energy to call Somalis in America “garbage.” It was the degrading jab that stung first, but it was “garbage” that lodged under my ribs. The way he said it. The way his whole cabinet pounded on the table like rabid animals, cheering as he called American citizens garbage. Mothers. Fathers. Kids who came here chasing the promise this country claims to offer. The sound of that room erupting in approval echoed something I’ve spent a lifetime trying to unlearn.

Maybe it landed harder yesterday because it was a Sunday in December — a gray, quiet day when everything in the air felt reflective, and everything inside me felt a little more exposed, a little more tender.

Or maybe it’s because my dad came here as a teenager from Lebanon with skin so dark people treated him like he didn’t belong in the country he was desperate to build a life in. It didn’t harden him though. He spent fifty years working for our Department of Defense. He loved this country. He believed in it. He instilled that love and belief in me. But Donald Trump, that evil piece of shit, would probably call him “garbage.”

Or maybe it landed so hard because all week I’d watched clip after clip of human beings being dragged out of cars and homes and workplaces — pushed face-first into pavement, pinned, beaten, terrorized by masked men performing his cruelty with their own hands. That kind of brutality doesn’t rinse off. It settles into the part of your spirit where fear and fury and grief knot together. And you start asking yourself how much more a country can absorb before something inside us snaps.

And like always, my first responders came roaring up — the jokes, the mocking, the fury disguised as humor because sometimes humor is the only shield I’ve got left. They show up fast, performing triage on the softest parts of me. They’re my armor. They’re the part of me that refuses to let anyone see that I’m hurting.

But underneath all that noise — the sarcasm, the sharp edges, the reflex to make pain look like a joke — something quieter was stirring. The deeper ache, the one born in childhood, the one literally etched into my face by the point of a heel at four years old, the one shaped later by seven years spent kneeling beside autistic preschoolers whose humanity deserved reverence, not ridicule… that ache simply waited. Watching. Holding its breath.

If I’m being honest, I was crying when I wrote this yesterday. Full-on ugly crying, the kind that blurs the screen and turns every sentence into a guess. It hit me all at once, this wave I’d been trying to outrun. I realized I’d spent the whole week dodging my own reaction to his cruelty — cracking jokes, writing satire, pretending the sting hadn’t reached me. But it had. Deeply.

Trauma doesn’t wait until it’s convenient. It arrives when your guard is down, touches the oldest parts of you, and reminds you that healing is never a straight line.

Yesterday, I faced it. I let myself cry. I wrote through it. And then I stepped outside and put up my Christmas lights because I needed something warm and steady to tether myself to. Something bright and human and steady. Something that reminded me there’s still light, even on days like that one when everything feels too dark.

Because the truth is, bullies have been the recurring architecture of my life. They showed up in classrooms and living rooms, in hallways and courtrooms, in the quiet places where I learned to shrink and the loud ones where I learned to fight. I’ve spent years unlearning the lies they taught me about myself. And I know I’m not alone. So many of you reading this feel that same tightening in your chest when cruelty enters the room. You feel the old bruise wake up. You feel your breath shorten.

You’re not imagining it. You’re not weak. You’re not alone. Bullies leave fingerprints time can’t fully lift.

And here we are again, enduring a bully who thrives on the harm he inflicts. Every day brings a new target, a new wound, a new attempt to turn living, breathing human beings into objects for ridicule or rage. It’s trauma on top of trauma. It’s a wound reopened every morning. The heaviness isn’t imagined. It’s lived.

And by the time you read this, he’ll have already inflicted something new — another blow, another vile insult, another round of state-sanctioned bullying — because that’s the rhythm of life under a man who wakes up every day searching for fresh ways to wound.

It sucks living this way. It’s hard. But Nietzsche was right — what doesn’t kill you does make you stronger. Except for bears. Bears will kill you. That part isn’t Nietzsche. That’s just… well… bears.

But the joke isn’t enough anymore. Not yesterday. Not today. Because the strength he forces us to build is a strength we never asked for. Maybe it’s the cold. Maybe it’s age. Maybe it’s the headlines that keep getting darker. Or maybe — let’s be honest — it’s because the evil, idiot, fat-face felon, traitor rapist who bragged about grabbing women by the pussy and unleashed his basement-dwelling incel horde on our Capitol is once again sitting his cocktail-sauce-stained, syphilitic, sexual-predator ass behind our Resolute Desk.

And now he’s gathered a who’s who of the world’s douchiest degenerates — a Smorgasburg of rapists, convicts, liars, grifters, gaslighters, gropers, and goons — and handed them the power to decide whether our children inherit a country that still works, still heals, still breathes.

We’ve faced bullies before. He’s not new. He’s not special. He’s not complicated. He’s the same sad, dangerous pattern in a sloppier suit. And I know bullies. Believe me. I know how they operate. I know how they implode. I know how they fall.

My mother didn’t teach me how to sew or braid or bake. She taught me how to read fear. How to dodge blows. How to rise with a lip split open by the pointy end of her high heel when I was four. She taught me how to disappear. And eventually, how to reappear stronger. She was my first bully. My first battlefield. My original why.

And when I finally stood up to her, when I took my power back, I thought I’d ended that story forever. But life has a way of introducing you to new bullies — the one at home I didn’t recognize until it was nearly too late, the ones who tried to take my children’s house, the ones who mistook my fear for surrender. Each time, I rebuilt. Each time, I rose. Each time, I learned that endurance isn’t agreement. That surviving doesn’t mean staying silent. That I’m made of more than what they tried to break.

And that’s how I know we’re not powerless now. He wants us numb. He wants us drained. He wants us to believe cruelty’s inevitable. Bullies win by collapsing the spirit, not the body. But bullies are beatable. Not because they soften, but because we harden in the right places and stay soft in the ones they can’t reach.

And I keep coming back to something I say all the time: the only way out is through, and the only way through is together. I believe that in the place inside me that refuses to go dark. Maybe that makes me naive. Maybe it makes me foolish in a moment that feels unforgiving and bleak. But I don’t care. I don’t give a single shit if hope makes me look naive. I’ve survived too many people who should’ve destroyed me to abandon the belief that most of us are still trying to be decent.

Do we have a shocking capacity for cruelty in this country? Yes. It still rattles me. But cruelty isn’t who we are at our core. It’s loud, but it’s not the majority. Most of us still carry an unspoken agreement to choose decency, to show up with kindness, to look out for one another in quiet, everyday ways.

Are the Trump cultists ever gonna see the light? No. And honestly, who cares? The ones who cheer for cruelty might drown out a room for a moment, but they’re not the ones carrying this country. They’re not its core.

We don’t need them.

What we need is each other. We need to let ourselves feel what we feel. Not because we’ve been pretending this isn’t heavy, but because we so rarely give ourselves the grace to admit just how heavy it is. This isolation we feel — it’s not imagined. It’s manufactured. It’s part of the design.

We’re not imagining the isolation — it’s the point. That’s how they win: when they make us feel cut off from one another, when the weight corners us into silence, when it convinces us we have to carry it alone.

But we’re not alone. We never have been. And that’s our strength. That’s our resistance. That’s the thing they can’t touch.

We don’t just endure — we push back. We call out cruelty. We demand more from our leaders, from each other, from ourselves. We insist on decency. We insist on kindness. We insist on a country where everyone matters.

It’s not easy, and it never will be. Some days we fall down. Some days we fall apart. And that’s okay. What matters is that we keep getting back up — and we keep showing up for each other.

That’s how we move forward. That’s how we hold on to hope. And in the end, that’s how we defeat the bullies — by refusing to stay down, and by refusing to let them define who we are.

We define ourselves. Together.

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