Cultural Programming & Nervous System Rewrites
The television was the altar.
It glowed through dinner. Through birthdays. Through breakups.
It played during punishment and praise.
It whispered how to live, even when no one else did.
We weren’t just watching it.
We were trained by it.
We learned:
▸ Be nice, even when you’re bleeding.
▸ Laugh when it hurts.
▸ Drink when it’s quiet.
▸ Love people who don’t see you.
▸ Call chaos “chemistry.”
▸ Call silence “peace.”
▸ Call shame “maturity.”
No one taught us this.
They just left the TV on.
And we inhaled it like air.
So now—when you flinch at directness, when you ghost your friends, when you swallow your rage and call it growth—remember:
That’s not a flaw.
That’s programming.
This is Where We Rewrite the Script.
RAISED BY SITCOMS is a space to unlearn the laugh track.
To name the beliefs that were baked into the background.
To cut the spell of what we were told was normal.
No fixing. No rescuing. No polite rebrands.
Just truth.
The holy, awkward, sometimes hilarious moment when you realize:
“That wasn’t me. That was the script.”
And now?
You get to throw it out.
Crow would say:
You didn’t ask for the script.
But you get to rewrite the ending.

Space Quest or Space Escape? Unpacking My Battle for Control in Frasier Season 1, Episode 2
This blog dives into Frasier Season 1, Episode 2: Space Quest—not as a sitcom recap, but as a full-blown emotional excavation.
It explores how rituals, mockery, and the fantasy of solitude are used as survival mechanisms when emotional vulnerability feels too dangerous.
Through Frasier’s collapse and my own reflections, I unpack how control becomes a substitute for real peace—and how true space can only be built inside.
This is a sacred, soul-cracking dissection for anyone tired of performing survival and ready to come home to themselves.