There is a heaviness in the world right now—one you can feel even in silence. In this episode, I explore why hate feels so easy in moments of fear and uncertainty, and why it so often disguises collapse as strength. I unpack how hate offers quick answers, false control, and loud certainty, while quietly hollowing us out from the inside. And then I return to a truth shaped not by theory, but by loss: the only thing more powerful than hate has always been love.
This conversation isn’t about neutrality or pretending harm doesn’t exist. I have a side. I know where I stand. But love, as I describe it here, is not the absence of conviction—it’s the discipline to stand firm without becoming cruel. Drawing from grief, lived experience, and hard-earned clarity, I talk about how love slows us down, asks more of us, and refuses to let pain calcify into bitterness. If you’re tired of the noise, exhausted by anger, or struggling to stay human in a hardened world, this episode is an invitation: to choose love intentionally—not because it’s easy, but because it’s right.