The Messy Middle
Epistolary essays exploring recurring psychological questions that resist clean resolution.
This collection consists of epistolary-style psychological essays organized around composite reader questions that recur across human experience, using named prompts as narrative frames for public reflection rather than personal correspondence. The series is developed as reflective psychological inquiry, not problem-solving or individualized guidance, focusing on the shared contours of uncertainty, loss, change, and identity disruption rather than resolution or instruction. Presented as a completed body of public psychological writing, these essays function neither as advice columns nor as therapeutic substitutes.
“I Feel Like I’m Watching the Country Unravel and No One Cares”
When institutions collapse in plain sight and others call it normal, the grief isn’t just political—it’s personal. This is not overreaction. It’s heartbreak. And your refusal to go numb is its own quiet act of resistance.