Thursday, May 28, 2026

Discussing Blood Spatter Patterns

True crime used to be something you watched occasionally. Now it’s basically a personality type.

People don’t “watch a documentary” anymore. They consume seventeen hours of dismemberment while folding towels and calling it self care.

Everyone’s sitting there eating garlic bread while calmly discussing blood spatter patterns like they’re reviewing a renovation show.

“Oh this one’s REALLY good.”

Good? Karen, three people were buried under a patio.

The weirdest part is how cosy they’ve made it all. Soft narration. Rain sounds. Gentle piano music. A woman describing homicide like she’s reading a bedtime story at daycare.

And the audience? Completely feral.

The second a woman goes missing, half the internet transforms into detectives. Suddenly people named Brenda with a crystal collection are zooming into CCTV footage claiming they’ve “noticed something disturbing.”

No, Brenda. That’s a wheelie bin.

And every single case now gets treated like entertainment content. There are fan groups. Rankings. Favourite killers. Merchandise. Actual merchandise. Somewhere along the line society crossed over from “this is tragic” into “season two better drop soon.”

The internet has turned human suffering into background noise.

We don’t process horror anymore. We binge it.

Then we wonder why everybody’s anxious, suspicious and convinced their husband is secretly poisoning them because he made spaghetti without being asked.

Honestly, if aliens arrive tomorrow, take one look at Netflix and leave, I wouldn’t blame them.

How Casually the World Waits

Powerful men love war the way gamblers love poker when it isn’t their own money on the table.

Every few years the world gets dragged back into the same exhausting performance: threats, retaliation, televised outrage and politicians speaking in that strange robotic language designed to make destruction sound responsible.

“Strategic response.”
“Necessary action.”
“Measured retaliation.”

Human beings have somehow invented corporate terminology for blowing each other up.

The latest US-Iran escalation feels less like leadership and more like ego with access to weapons. Everyone postures. Everyone warns. Everyone promises consequences. And the public is expected to sit there consuming it like another Netflix series while the price of fuel climbs and the possibility of catastrophe inches closer.

That’s the grotesque part of modern conflict. It is packaged for spectators.

News banners flash like sports scores. Commentators debate missile strikes between advertisements for insurance and fried chicken. Men in suits discuss “acceptable losses” while ordinary people quietly wonder how they’re supposed to afford groceries next week if oil prices spike again.

And somehow the same people who can’t organise functioning healthcare systems, affordable housing, or public transport suddenly become experts at mobilising billions of dollars for military operations overnight.

Funny, that.

War has become theatre for powerful nations. Flags wave. Speeches swell. Comment sections explode with people cheering for countries they couldn’t find on a map three days ago.

Meanwhile, civilians become statistics.

Again.

There is something deeply unsettling about how casually the world now approaches the possibility of disaster. Everyone speaks in headlines. Nobody speaks like a human being anymore. Just slogans, threats, and patriotic branding wrapped around fear.

And the rest of us? We refresh the news feed like nervous addicts waiting to see which powerful man decides the planet needs another crisis.

Wednesday, May 27, 2026

In Case You Are Mildly Curious...

I've been home for a week; and that time consists of doing housework from top to bottom and going to the gym. Neither of which I'm fond of... So, I let my mind wander and find my thoughts are in Vietnam again!

There’s something deeply humbling about getting your nails done in Vietnam when you’re a middle-aged Australian woman whose entire beauty routine at home mostly consists of “that’ll do.”

The Vietnamese girls are tiny, immaculate creatures with perfect skin, glossy hair and the hand speed of caffeinated spiders. Meanwhile I arrive looking like someone who’s fought a lawn mower with her hair and it's so hot I had it in plaits most of the time!

I sat down confidently and immediately became aware of my feet.

Why do feet suddenly become horrifying the second another human professionally examines them?

At home you think: "These are perfectly normal feet.”

Under salon lighting? You’ve apparently dragged Frodo to Mordor barefoot.

The girl smiled politely while holding my hand in the same way a mechanic examines a damaged alternator.

Then came the colours.

Vietnamese nail salons have approximately 84 million shades of pink. Every single sample stick looked identical until you held them under the light where suddenly one became “Dusty Rose Sunset” and another was apparently “Peach Champagne Whisper.”

I chose one entirely at random because panic had set in.

Then the massage started.

Now listen. These women do not gently moisturise your hands. They attack knots in your shoulders you didn’t even know existed. At one point I think I briefly left my body.

The Squeeze sat nearby getting increasingly nervous because every ten minutes another tiny woman would appear carrying strange instruments that looked medically unnecessary.

And somehow — somehow — despite all this chaos, I walked out feeling like a glamorous international woman of mystery instead of someone who earlier nearly fell asleep in a bowl of noodles.

That’s the magic of Vietnam.

One minute you’re sweating through your underpants while crossing the road in terror. The next minute you’re sitting in a nail salon being aggressively exfoliated into a better person.

Oh why can't I be back there! I barely thought of Trump or the stupid impending war!

The Whole World Is Addicted To Outrage

Nobody talks anymore.

They perform.

Every opinion now arrives like a WWE entrance theme. People storm into conversations foaming at the mouth over things that, five years ago, they wouldn’t even have noticed while eating a sandwich.

The internet has trained humanity to react like poisoned squirrels.

Everyone is furious.
Nobody is happy.
And somehow every single person believes they are the reasonable one.

You can’t say:
“I’m not sure.”

Oh no. That’s weakness now.

You must arrive screaming with absolute certainty about geopolitics, celebrity divorces, plastic straws, chickens, pronouns, billionaires, electric cars, Palestine, America, capitalism, socialism, gluten and probably the moon.

Silence used to mean peace.
Now silence means your Wi-Fi dropped out.

And honestly? Half the world doesn’t even care about the issue they’re screaming about. They care about belonging to a side.

Why Can't These Idiots Get Along..?

They always say it like it’s a movie trailer – Out Now. Watch this! “Evil will be answered.”

Answered by who? A man in a suit standing behind a podium pretending he’s in an action film while the rest of the world quietly updates its emergency contacts?

Every international conflict now sounds like two blokes in a pub car park yelling, “Say it again. SAY IT AGAIN.” Except these idiots have missiles.

The media doesn’t help. Everything is “fury”, “rage”, “humiliation”, “retaliation”, “final warning”. News headlines read like a WWE promo written by a caffeinated twelve-year-old. (Come to think of it, that would be funny!)

And meanwhile normal people are just trying to buy groceries without needing a small personal loan for tomatoes or fuel to get to the grocery store!

There’s something deeply absurd about world leaders threatening each other with “consequences” while ordinary people are sitting on the couch eating garlic bread wondering if World War III will interrupt whatever the viewing pleasure is that night.

Nobody powerful ever says:
“Perhaps everyone should calm the hell down.”

No. It’s always:
“We will respond.”
“We will not forget.”
“Evil will be answered.”

Fantastic. That sounds stable.

The frightening part isn’t even the threats anymore. It’s how performative it all feels. Politics has become theatre for angry people online. Every leader talks like they’re auditioning for the role of Tough Guy Number Three.

And social media claps like trained seals every time someone says something dramatic.

At this point, humanity isn’t being led.
It’s being comment - sectioned into oblivion.