Messy Mondays: Make Caring Cool Again 💕

Messy Mondays, but make it civic. Because I love this city, and I want to feel like it loves me back.


🧱 The Fence Fiasco (aka: why I’m mad)

I reached out to my councilman. I sent emails. I made phone calls. A supervisor even came out to my property. And it still feels like nobody in the department gave a shit.

Here’s the mess: I called the Department of Blight about the abandoned property directly behind me because there were squatters doing illegal activity, and I couldn’t access the side lotI PAID FOR to clean it up. The city came to “clean” the lot… and tore down part of my fence in the process.

I called for help. I didn’t expect my property to get damaged. That’s some bullshit.


🧊 The Bureaucratic Brush-Off

When I asked for accountability, the Department of Demolition & Construction sent a supervisor and a small team. They barely looked at me, barely spoke to me. I’m upset (not yelling just upset), expecting a solution. Instead I’m told:

  • It’s not their problem.
  • There’s “no distinct property line” on some weird map on a computer, so somehow the city “technically” owns where my fence was.
  • “Aren’t you glad the property got cleaned up?” (It was still dirty 😒)
  • The vibe was basically: Oh well, bitch your fault for wanting good in the hood.

On top of that, the supervisor doesn’t even live here. And yes, she was black and still, the care just wasn’t there. I don’t want anyone to lose their job. I don’t want to sound like I’m « snitching » but these are people in charge of departments and peoples homes are their lives.


🧩 Why This Isn’t “Just a Fence”

So many of us are living paycheck to paycheck, me included. Most millennials don’t have a savings account big enough to fix something like this. And we shouldn’t have to come out of pocket to fix damage the city caused.

I get that the job is hard. I get that residents can be challenging. Everybody’s job is challenging at some point but the level of apathy I keep running into is unreal. It looks and feels like recklessness and negligence, rushing to get a job done quickly, and then refusing to admit a mistake. No apology. No care. It’s just “not our problem.”


🗂️ Departments, Dynamics & Doing the Damn Job

I’m not asking for “social-emotional training” that’s not what I’m saying. I’m saying care. Care when you come out to assess. Care when you explain a map. Care enough not to bulldoze my fence because it’s faster than actually picking up trash. Care enough to apologize when you mess up. Care enough to treat residents like people, not problems.

And it makes me wonder:

  • Who is hiring these people?
  • Why are the requirements so low for jobs that impact our homes and safety?
  • Why does it feel like I’m bothering you for asking you to do your job?

🗑️ From Trash to Truth (the bigger picture)

This isn’t my first call, complaint, or court date. I keep bumping into the same attitude across departments: apathy. Shrugs. Eye rolls. Like the city’s default is to deflect instead of fix.

This, to me, highlights a larger issue in our political climate. People are disappointed in leadership for a reason. Micro issues like this point straight to the macro. If you put people in charge who don’t give a shit, that attitude trickles down into departments, policies, and neighborhoods.

📣 Influencers, Listen Up (yes, I said it 👀)

When you put people in charge who don’t give a shit, that attitude trickles down. It seeps into departments, into policies, into neighborhoods. And honestly? That’s on us too, our Detroit.

Because a part of the problem is right here at home: Detroit influencers. Too many are more focused on curating content for tourists than speaking directly to the people who live here. And I’m not pulling that from nowhere shoutout to Chrissy (Socially Chrissy), who said it plain. She actually cares about the city and the residents, not just the optics.

⚖️ Where’s the Balance?

The balance is off. Too many influencers are chasing aesthetics, luxury, and clicks, while our neighborhoods are left without advocates. We need to be talking to the residents, the folks planted here, not just the people passing through.

👉🏽 And that’s where critical thinking comes in. We need to ask: Who are we centering? Who are we serving? It can’t just be about vibes, parties, and photo ops. It has to also be about policies, paychecks, potholes, and thr people.

🗳️ Elections Are Coming

We should be using our platforms to bring awareness, to get folks mobilized, to remind people that local elections matter just as much as presidential ones. Because elections are coming up, governor, mayor, city leadership and if we don’t start using our influence to actually influence change, then what are we even doing?

We need to care about who’s running, who’s funding them, and who they’re beholden to. Not corporations, not developers, but us the residents. Because when we demand accountability, empathy, and honesty at the top, it doesn’t just stop there it trickles down. It shapes how departments treat us, how policies are written, and how neighborhoods either thrive or get left behind.


🌱 Make Caring Cool Again 🌱

At the end of the day, this is bigger than one fence, one property, or even one department messing up. This is about a culture of apathy that has seeped too deep into our city and the need to flip that culture on its head.

It should be cool to care again. Cool to pour into your neighborhood. Cool to demand better from your city. Cool to balance joy with justice.

Influencers, residents, city workers, politicians, everybody. We all have a role. Because when caring becomes contagious, communities change. And Detroit deserves that.

Messy Mondays: Bingeing, Brainrot, and Bad Vibes📺🧠

The Influence of Algorithms and Opinions 

Lately, I’ve been noticing something that feels…off. Social media, TV, and advertising are shaping our minds in ways that aren’t always obvious. Take Netflix’s K-Pop Demon Hunters, no shade to the movie, but personally, I could not get into it. I tried on three different occasions. The storyline didn’t grab me, the music didn’t stick. Yet everywhere I looked, I saw reels, articles, and posts praising it, talking about how it was basically the best thing to hit the music scene since Beyonce.

And when someone asked me about it in conversation, I found myself saying I enjoyed it even though I didn’t. Its not like I wanted to avoid the back-and-forth, the defense, the “why don’t you like it?” stuff. It was just the first thing to pop into my brain😬. My actual opinion had been overruled by what social media told me I should think. And it’s happening all the time, in both small and large ways.

Social media and the Internet are designed to pummel our brains, our serotonin and dopamine levels, with repeated opinions over and over. Even when we try to block, restrict, or ignore content, the algorithm still pushes similar posts. I’m very strict with my algorithm. My block button is busy baby, but even content I’ve never engaged with finds a way back in. And it isn’t just about repetition. It’s about shaping our thinking, slowly, subtly, and relentlessly.


Half-Baked Thoughts Everywhere 🍰🤯

Influencers play a big role in this. Too often, they post content that is shallow, click-baitey, or designed to inflame rather than educate. People aren’t reading, thinking, or analyzing; they’re parroting half-baked thoughts. And those half-baked thoughts get repeated. Before you know it, we have too many people whose thinking is shallow, whose opinions are surface-level, and who don’t critically evaluate what they’re consuming.

This isn’t just about memes or TikToks. This is the same problem on Twitter, on Threads, in Instagram posts, broad, sweeping statements with zero nuance. Big influencers, small influencers, local influencers none of them seem to be thinking about the impact of what they post, only the increase in their bank account.

When people accept those half-baked ideas as their own, it multiplies. We end up with groups of people incapable of critical thought, repeating incomplete ideas, and spreading them further. And if we can’t think critically as a society, how can we move forward collectively?


Children’s Media: Short Attention Spans, Shallow Content 

The problem extends to children’s TV as well. I’ve monitored Cozi’s screen time carefully, letting her watch shows like Paw Patrol and Gabby’s Dollhouse. At first, it seemed harmless. But the more I observed, the more I noticed that episodes are shorter, and the shows are endlessly franchised with variations of the same show.

This isn’t fostering imagination or critical thinking. It’s training attention spans to be short and creating distraction for distraction’s sake. Our children are consuming content that doesn’t challenge them, doesn’t provoke thought, and doesn’t encourage meaningful conversation.

I want TV that my child can watch and then talk about with me content that sparks curiosity, builds memory, and teaches problem-solving. Not shows designed to babysit. When I grew up, shows like Crash Box or Happily Ever After: Fairy Tales for Every Child had nuance, imagination, and care. That kind of thoughtful, complex programming is disappearing, replaced by franchise expansion and profit-driven decisions 💸.


Adult Entertainment and Cultural Impact 🎭📉

This trend stretches beyond kids television. Black adult entertainment, particularly on platforms like Zeus Network, has become increasingly vulgar, lowbrow, and raunchy. Black and white celebrity content alike suffers from sensationalism, stereotypes, and glorification of low vibrational lifestyles but I am noticing a purposeful and rapid shift in terms of black entertainment.

Shows that once had intentionality like The Cosby Show (say what you will), which included guidance from psychologists to ensure storylines portrayed healthy interactions and moral lessons centered around an African American family are rare today. What we’re seeing now are shows filled with toxic relationships, unexamined privilege, and low-quality storytelling, lacking the care and intentionality that once made programming meaningful and impactful.

Influencers mirror this trend. Many glorify partying, substance use, and shallow lifestyles without engaging in civic action, community building, or thoughtful discussion. The content they produce isn’t neutral it’s shaping perceptions, influencing children, and creating norms.


Raising Standards and Protecting Minds 

So what can we do? First, we need to become intentional about what we consume. Who produces the media? Who owns the shows and networks? What values are being promoted? Which influencers do we follow, and are they modeling behavior we want our children to emulate? Are they modeling lifestyles that negatively impact the greater good?

We have to demand more for ourselves and for the younger generation. Accepting the status quo, the half-baked thoughts, shallow programming, and algorithmic manipulation guarantees we remain intellectually stagnant and reduces the quality of life for ourselves and our children.

Before you retweet, repost, or let a child watch a show, pause. Ask: does this content align with my values? Is it creating a better, smarter, more thoughtful world?


💡 Closing Thought

Messy Mondays isn’t just about cleaning the house, it’s about thinking critically, choosing intentionally, and shaping the environment around us. Social media and TV are powerful, and the messages we allow into our homes matter. Half-baked thoughts don’t have to become our half-baked lives. Let’s raise our standards, protect our minds, and demand better for the children, communities, and culture we care about 🌱