💔 Laughing Until It Hurts: Why Being One of the Guys Isn’t What It Seems

This one’s been sitting heavy on my chest for a while. For most of my life, I’ve found myself in rooms full of guys—joking with them, laughing with them, feeling like I belonged. But lately, I’ve started noticing the cracks in that comfort. This essay is about what it’s like being the only girl in the group, how easy that role can feel… until it doesn’t. It’s about misogyny hiding under the surface, the cost of calling it out, and the strange grief that comes with realizing not every friendship was what you thought it was. If you’ve ever been “the cool girl,” I hope this resonates.

I’ve been the only girl in a group of guys more times than I can count.

It’s not always intentional. It just… happens. It’s like wherever I go, I gravitate toward guys. And for most of my life, especially as I’ve gotten older, I’ve found that easier in a lot of ways. Simpler, sometimes. Less socially exhausting. More straightforward. There’s a kind of casualness in guy groups that can feel like a relief—especially when you’ve spent your life being hyper-aware of every social cue, every shift in tone, every invisible expectation in a room.

That doesn’t mean I don’t love my girlfriends. I do. Fiercely. The bonds I share with the women in my life are sacred—layered with honesty, softness, truth-telling, deep care. They hold space for things that guys often… don’t. Or can’t. Or won’t.

But still, I keep finding myself surrounded by guys. And until recently, I didn’t question that much.

Now, I do.

Because the ease I used to feel? It’s started to morph into something heavier. I’ve started to notice what I didn’t before—because I didn’t have the language or maybe the clarity to name it. I didn’t notice how much I was tolerating. How much I was excusing. How much I was shrinking myself to keep the peace or stay “cool” or not make things awkward.

When you’re the only girl, and the guys feel safe enough to really talk around you, you start to hear it all. The jokes. The comments. The assumptions. The way they talk about women when they think no one is holding them accountable. And sometimes it’s subtle—like a breeze that leaves a bruise you don’t notice until later. Other times it’s just blatant. Disrespectful. Gross. Dehumanizing.

But you laugh.
Or you don’t say anything.
Or you say it softly, with a little “haha” at the end so it doesn’t feel like you’re that girl—you know, the buzzkill feminist.

And here’s the thing: lately, I have been that girl. I’ve started calling them out. Naming it. Saying, “Hey, that’s not okay,” or “You don’t get to talk about women like that,” or “This isn’t funny.” And the backlash? It’s real. The pushback is intense. I get told to stop. They flat out deny it. Or laugh louder. Or say I’m ruining the vibe. They hate you for breaking the illusion. They hate you for not playing along.

And here’s the real gut punch: even when they respect you, you’re not exempt from the way they treat women. Because that’s the system. That’s patriarchy. You might be the “cool girl” to them, the one who’s “not like other girls,” but you’re still a girl. And eventually, you’ll feel it.

It also wasn’t until just this past year—after several people finally said it out loud to me, and I finally let myself believe it—that I realized something else: most of these guys wouldn’t have even tried to be friends with me if they didn’t find me attractive. And that truth? That wrecked me. Because it’s like, wait—so we’re not even really friends? You’re just sticking around because I’m pretty enough to look at?

It makes me question everything.

It makes me question every friendship I thought was real.
It makes me scared to just be myself—bubbly, kind, open, warm—around new guys, because what if they’re not seeing me, they’re just seeing someone they want something from?
What if they’re not even listening, they’re just waiting for a moment to turn friendship into something else?

That fear lives in me now. And I hate it. Because that warmth and friendliness? That’s just who I am. I like people. I love making new friends. I believe in being real and showing up fully. But now it feels dangerous.

I think I used to believe that if I could just be one of them—blend in, adapt, understand their world—I’d be safer. Or maybe even more powerful. I didn’t realize that sometimes, being the only girl in the group just means being the only one absorbing the full emotional weight of everything said and unsaid.

I’m tired of laughing things off. Of translating misogyny into banter. Of pretending it doesn’t hurt when they talk about women like objects and then look at me like I should be grateful they “respect me.”

There’s a toxicity that builds up—not always loud, not always cruel, but heavy. Quiet. Constant. And I’ve finally started to feel it in my bones.

I don’t have all the answers. I’m not saying I’m done having guy friends. But I’m also not going to keep pretending that being surrounded by men doesn’t come with its own kind of cost. I want my friendships to be honest. Accountable. Kind. And that includes calling shit out, not just keeping the peace.Because I deserve to be seen.
Not just accepted.
Not just “tolerated because I’m hot.”
Seen. For real.

friendship, gender dynamics, feminism, emotional labor, patriarchy, neurodivergence, authenticity

“Petals from Her Mouth” (Chapter 1)

A hand holding a cluster of vibrant red flowers, with a blurred sidewalk and fallen leaves in the background.

Hi friends—

This is Chapter One of my new novel-in-progress, Petals from Her Mouth, a psychological horror story about girlhood, perfection, rebellion, and remembering the version of yourself they tried to erase. I’ll be publishing chapters here as I go. Thank you for reading and for walking with Romy.

“I think I’m falling apart, but beautifully.”
Petals from Her Mouth

Chapter One: The Perfect Girl™

Romy smiled because that was the rule.
Not the written one, not the kind on a sign—but the kind you learn in your bones, the kind carved in classroom corners and whispered into your scalp while your hair is being neatly brushed back behind your ears.

Smile. Sit straight. Use the right tone.

She sat in Behavioral Harmony, third row from the front. Her hands were folded on the desk. Palms dry. Nails clean. Uniform ironed. She’d triple-checked everything before she left the house.

Still, the instructor—Miss Grant—lingered too long when she passed Romy’s desk.

“Eyes forward, Miss S.”

Romy’s gaze snapped back to the front of the room. A screen glowed there: soft pink with white cursive text, a daily mantra.

“My feelings are not more important than my presence.”

Everyone repeated it together.

“My feelings are not more important than my presence.”

Romy’s voice caught in her throat.

She coughed.
Something fluttered up.

She clamped a hand over her mouth.

It was just a breath. Just air. Just nerves. That’s what she told herself.

But when she pulled her hand away, there it was:
A single petal.

Pale pink. Soft. Sitting in her palm like a secret.

She closed her fist around it before anyone saw.


After class, she threw it in the trash.

She didn’t tell anyone.
Not her mom.
Not her dad.
Not even Ivy—not yet.

Because how do you explain something like that?

How do you tell someone, “I think I’m falling apart, but beautifully?”


Later, in therapy, Ms. Voss would ask if she was experiencing “creative ideation,” and Romy would lie and say no.

Because it wasn’t imagination.

And the petals wouldn’t stop.


The therapy room smelled like lavender and static.

Everything was beige—the walls, the chairs, the lamp that gave off light but no warmth. Only the couch cushions broke the monotony, a soft coral pink, the color of diluted blood.

Romy sat down without being asked. She already knew the script.

Ms. Voss appeared from behind her glass desk with her usual notepad and her smile—plastic-perfect, default setting.

“Before we begin, Romy, would you like to take a breath together?”

“I’m already breathing,” Romy said flatly.

Ms. Voss didn’t flinch. She just made a small mark on her pad.

Level One Resistance – Passive Tone.

“Let’s start with your emotional check-in. On a scale from one to compliant, how are you feeling today?”

Romy said nothing.

She thought of the petal in the trash bin. The way it had floated down like it didn’t belong to gravity. The way it had felt like hers, even though it came from nowhere.

“Romy?”

“I guess I’m feeling a little… fractured.”

Another mark.

Word Choice: Unstable Metaphor – Flag for Re-Eval Monitor.

“What does ‘fractured’ mean to you?”

Romy looked past Ms. Voss, to the mirror on the far wall.
It was supposed to be one-way. But Romy always saw something else in it.

A flash of herself with no mouth.
A twitch she didn’t make.
A version of her that stayed still when she moved.

She blinked. It was gone.

“It means I don’t know who I’m supposed to be right now,” she said finally. “But I know I’m not doing it right.”

Ms. Voss smiled again.
Wrote another note.

“Self-awareness is a great first step.”

“That’s not what I—” Romy stopped.

She didn’t finish the sentence. What would be the point?

Every word she gave them would be dissected, categorized, weaponized. And anyway, she was starting to feel it again—that shift in her throat. The tickle of something too soft to be swallowed.

“You’ve been flagged for a sleep scan tonight,” Ms. Voss added casually. “It’s standard, just a dream monitor. Nothing invasive.”

Romy’s stomach turned.

“Okay,” she said, barely above a whisper.

“We’re so proud of your progress,” Ms. Voss said.

Then she reached into her drawer and pulled out a small pink sticker.

“Wear this tonight. It helps the scan calibrate. And Romy?”

“Yes?”

“Make sure your dreams are… appropriate.”


That night, Romy stared at the sticker in her hand. It looked like a heart. It pulsed once in her palm.

Slowly, she peeled it open.

And stuck it to her skin.


Her mom didn’t ask about the sticker.

She saw it, though—Romy caught the flicker in her eyes when she changed into pajamas and the pink heart glowed faintly on her shoulder.

But her mom didn’t say a word.

Instead, she handed Romy a mug of tea—chamomile, honey, vanilla. The same blend she made every Sunday night, the one she called reset tea.

“It’s extra sweet tonight,” her mom said, brushing a strand of hair from Romy’s face. “I had a feeling you needed it.”

Romy tried to smile. It didn’t quite reach.

“Thanks,” she whispered.

They sat together on the edge of her bed, legs curled beneath them, the silence soft and full of breathing.

Juno jumped up and made herself a loaf between them, purring like a motor under a quilt.

“I remember when they first started doing these scans,” her mom said suddenly. “Said they were for emotional wellness. Said they’d help girls sleep better.”

“Did they help you?”

Her mom hesitated. Then she shook her head.

“They helped me pretend. Until I couldn’t anymore.”

She didn’t say anything else. Just reached for Romy’s hand and squeezed.

Romy leaned into her shoulder and breathed in the smell of safety—lavender, lemon, and something like memory.

Later, when the lights were out and the house had gone still, Romy opened her journal and wrote one line:

“I don’t want my dreams to be appropriate.”

Then she closed the book.

And closed her eyes.

And waited for sleep to take her somewhere it wasn’t supposed to.

None of Your Business: Bodily Autonomy and the Power of Being a Woman

Salt-N-Pepa were yelling truth through my headphones when this essay started writing itself in my head.

“If I wanna take a guy home with me tonight, it’s none of your business!”

I wasn’t just listening—I was lip-syncing, stomping around my home like a woman possessed. That song doesn’t ask for permission. It doesn’t play nice. It kicks down the door and makes space for a woman to say, I belong to no one but me.

And as I sang those words loud enough for the neighbors to hear, I realized: this is it. This is the whole damn point.

Women get practically nothing in this world—not full safety, not full respect, not equal rights. But if we don’t even get our own bodies? Then what do we have left?

I’m not totally hopeless. I wish I could say I believe the patriarchy will collapse in my lifetime, but I don’t know. Maybe it will—and if it does, I’ll probably cry and pee myself out of pure joy. But until then, I want to be crystal clear about one thing:

A woman’s body belongs to her. No one else.

Let me say it louder:
I’m a grown-ass woman, and what I do with my body is none of your fucking business.


Objectified at Birth

From the moment we’re born, people start telling us who we are based on how we look.

“She’s so pretty.”
“Look at those eyelashes!”
“You’ve got a little heartbreaker on your hands!”

Compliments before we can walk, before we can speak—and they’re always about our appearance. Pretty. Cute. Beautiful.

Have you ever heard someone walk up to a baby boy and say, “He’s so handsome, he’s gonna break hearts”? Not really. Boys are strong. Boys are tough. Boys are smart. Girls are pretty.

And so it begins—this quiet but constant training that tells us our worth lives on the outside. That we are here to be looked at. That our bodies are not just our own, but for others to comment on, rate, touch, control.

By the time we’re old enough to notice, it’s everywhere.
Dress codes. Street harassment. Politicians making choices about our reproductive rights.
Our bodies have been claimed by everyone but us.

And that is terrifying. That is infuriating.


Silenced in Real Life

It’s not just politics. It’s not just headlines. It’s in my friend groups. Especially with my guy friends.

I try to speak—talked over.
Try to share—told to shut the fuck up.
Try to exist—mocked, ignored, laughed at.

And when I yell—because sometimes that’s the only way to be heard—I’m called dramatic. Crazy. “Too much.”

What am I even doing there, then? What’s the point of friendship if I’m just background noise?

I try to explain patriarchy. I try to talk about gender and fairness and equity. But I’m treated like I’m making it all up. Like I’m the problem. Like I’m speaking a language they’ve already decided not to understand.

It’s isolating.
It’s exhausting.
It’s one of the reasons I’ve wanted to die.

Not the only reason—but a big one. Because when the world constantly erases you, it’s hard to feel like you matter. Like you belong.

And then there’s the confusion. Am I here to be pretty or respected? Do I have to choose?

Add autism to the mix—undiagnosed until 32—and people still act like they know me better than I know myself. “You don’t seem autistic.” “Are you sure?” Yes. I’m fucking sure. I’ve spent years untangling this. I’m still learning. We all are. But people don’t even try.

And still—here I am.
Saying it out loud anyway.


The Power They Can’t Take

For everything this world tries to strip from us—our voices, our safety, our sanity—it still hasn’t found a way to take the one thing that lives deep in our bones: our power.

It’s not the kind of power written into law.
It’s older than that.
Wilder. Quieter. Unshakeable.

And I wouldn’t trade it for anything.

If reincarnation is real, I’d come back as a woman again. Every time.

Because even though this world tries to make it seem like being a woman is a disadvantage, there’s something we carry that can’t be touched. A generational fire. A knowing. A legacy.

I think of all the women who weren’t allowed to speak. Who weren’t allowed to choose. Who weren’t allowed to dream—and still, somehow, they survived.

They fought. They wrote. They whispered truths. They lit the path. And now I’m here—pissed off, alive, and writing this.

Sometimes I think about Buffy the Vampire Slayer, and it all clicks. She holds the power of every girl before her. She fights because they fought. That’s what womanhood is to me.

Yes, I’m tired.
Yes, I’m angry.
But I am not alone.


Hope That’s Bigger Than Us

I don’t know if I’ll live to see the day women have full autonomy.
But I hope someone does.

I hope some girl grows up in a world where her voice is not just tolerated, but expected.
Where she doesn’t have to choose between being pretty and being respected.
Where her body is hers and hers alone.

Where no one tells her she’s “too much” for daring to take up space.

Where she’s free to be loud.
To be weird.
To be whole.

That world may feel far away.
But hope is power, too.

Sometimes it’s just the decision to keep going.
To write. To scream. To speak anyway.

Because even if they don’t listen—
We’re still here.

And I’ll keep blasting Salt-N-Pepa, stomping through my house, saying it as loud as I need to:

“It’s none of your business.”

My body. My rules. My life.

Try and take that from me—and see how loud I can be.