Boundless Place
Thursday, June 18, 2026
Wednesday, June 17, 2026
The Algorithm Thinks I Need a Hug
Phones have this really funny thing they do now that they didn't used to. I really can't pinpoint when the change occurred, but change it did. Everything is connected in these strange little strings that link the most random things.
Search Google for a mover, and suddenly you get ads on Instagram for movers. Click on one obscure post, and suddenly there's an influx of similar-ish posts. It's not a coincidence. It's really, really shady and voyeuristic marketing. They know what you're looking for.
Well, it happened to me this week.
I'll tell you the facts, and then I'll tell you what I think happened.
Today.
Reddit.
Recommended.
A post.
From the
"Professional Cuddlers" subreddit.
You read that right.
And did I click?
My God, of course! It's like Jerry Springer—you have to look.
But here's how I think we got to this point.
First, I've been following the Rover subreddit for intel. You have posts from both sitters and customers, and they're freely sharing their rates, how they care for animals, expectations, pet peeves (pun intended), and so on. We needed a pet sitter. What a great way to research what I'd need to know—straight from the source, the boots on the ground, not the polished and marketable corporate branding.
Then I recently clicked on a ranty post about someone who had just found out their best friend was dating an AI companion.
Because I'm a nosy bitch.
And then the algorithm said,
"Oh, hiring people to do things in your home via an app? And..." checks notes "...AI companions? Yeah. Give her the professional cuddlers. Hire someone to hold you tonight."
And it's not that the arithmetic daddy-god energy matching up what to give me next was wrong, per se.
Because I am a little into the weird, and of course I wanted to read about what the heck this was and who was hiring them.
But I'm not someone who would hire a professional cuddler.
Then again...
I feel like I'd probably be a professional cuddler's favorite client.
I'm a good hugger. I don't fidget. I'd be so respectful of boundaries and considerate. Ask if this is something they do full-time or if they're also in grad school. Have really nice snacks. Always tip. And we'd have a lovely conversation.
Then again...
Isn't that probably exactly what all the clients think?
Maybe that's the algorithm's real talent.
Not knowing what I want.
Just knowing which strange little corners of me are curious enough to click.
Tuesday, June 16, 2026
That's the One
"In returning and rest you shall be saved; in quietness and trust shall be your strength." Isaiah 30:15
I lit a votive in a glass holder I bought off Etsy for my ancestors. I don't normally do ancestor stuff, but it was a weird moment when I was three dollars away from free shipping, and it was cheaper to add it than not. Enlightenment via capitalism strikes again!
So when it came, it burned down in half the estimated time, and the paper on the outside melted halfway off. Me, oh my. I didn't know y'all was hungry like that. Don't worry, babies. There's more where that came from. Your loyal child will provide.
Have you ever been floating in the middle of a pool, and it feels so nice you close your eyes? With your ears under the water, all you hear is your breath, so you breathe deeper and deeper. Time passes. Maybe a minute, maybe thirty, but your head lightly bonks the pool wall and you wake, having drifted to the edge without noticing.
Well, it's like for years I've been in the center of a pool—breaststroke, butterfly, doggy paddle, treading water. My heart's been beating hard. I've been out of breath. I've been afraid of drowning. And a few weeks ago, I just rolled onto my back, closed my eyes, and bonk, bonk, bonk—my sweet little head. I've almost arrived where I was frantically trying to get to in the first place.
What is that?
I light another candle. It's not special...not charged with whatever the Etsy witch puts in that shit. Heck, it's just from Dollar Tree. I think my ancestors might appreciate a frugal moment.
Because I like not struggling.
I like getting what I want when I want it.
Yesterday, I overheard my husband say on the phone, "All I want is for Caroline to be set for life. Fuck everything else."
Me too, dude. Me too.
And I put on a good act. But you know I've been ate up with regrets. I've poked my finger in every fucking hole in the marriage I could find. I wiggled that pinkie into every crevice and tested its limits. Examined all the lacks. All the things I'm MISSING OUT ON!
Bruh, I've been on Reddit. I've scoured Instagram. I've listened to enough podcasts to imagine a thousand different lives.
Only to come, time and time again, to the inevitable truth:
I love being loved like this.
And it's not low-self-esteem bullshit to say, "No one could love me like this," because it's true. There's only one of him. Someone else could love me. Love me well. Love me greatly. Love me better, perhaps.
But it wouldn't be like this.
Nothing is.
So anyway, before me was my mother. And my grandmother. And my great-grandmother. And so on and so forth. That's why I have a basket of ancestors to plead to.
One of y'all has to be looking down at me thinking, That's the one.
And I put an orange on the altar too. I don't know what y'all like, but a little variety beyond candles felt right.
You know, a few days ago my husband brought up getting a dog. Another dog. I've fought him on it. I've pleaded with him to wait. For years. But maybe it's because he's buying me a house and handling all the logistics, and I feel like one of those women who just does yoga and hydrates and listens to music and dances and cooks and cleans and picks flowers. Whatever girls skipping through wildflower meadows in Instagram be doing.
Whatever the reason, I was all on board.
And for weeks now, it's felt like my giving and receiving are calibrating. Like every time I hand something over, something else quietly arrives before I notice the empty space. I don't really understand it or know where it ends.
Maybe I didn't need to swim harder.
Maybe I just needed to trust that I was already floating in the right direction.
Bonk, bonk, bonk.
I've almost drifted to where I was trying to get all along.
Sunday, June 14, 2026
What No One Wants.
Friday, June 12, 2026
But Then There's Me
So, my husband should be going out of town next week. This will be only the third time in our nine-year relationship that we will have been apart overnight.
The first was in December 2016. I went to Florida solo to visit my mom, grandma, and aunt—all of whom are dead now, in that order.
Which feels impossible when I write it that way. At the time, they were simply people I was going to see.
It was very early in our relationship, before we were married. We had been living together for less than two months. It was easy on both of us.
In some ways, it was kind of fun.
So, at the prospect of my husband being out of town next week for a few days, I figured it would be the same.
But next week, Juneteenth—a day I have off from work—falls during his trip. I didn't realize this until after all the plans were made: tickets bought, car reserved, hotel booked.
Why does one day—no work, no husband—hold some sort of newness that I'm examining yet can't quite explain?
In my first marriage, to a totally different guy, I was alone a lot. I was on my own a lot. There were months when he didn't step foot into the apartment where we lived, and I saw him only a few days a week. In many regards, it was as if I wasn't married at all.
I was married, but I didn't share my life with him, and he did not share a life with me. We were coexisting in the way coworkers might sometimes see each other in meetings, make small talk, help out on a project, then disappear back into their own tasks completely separate from one another.
What do they even do on a daily basis?
We don't really know.
It's only the overlap we see and feel and know.
But this marriage has been different. From the start, we wove our lives together into one. The minutes, the hours, the days, the weeks—it is intrinsically linked. We have time apart, hours here and there. We have separate hobbies, hours here and there. But even apart, there's this line of communication: texts when we get there, when we leave, check-ins, do you need anything, do you want a Coke from the gas station?
Perhaps it's the solitude, quietness, the realization of how noisy my life is.
How full.
Of course, there is the background noise: another person with whom I share my home, moving from room to room, working, taking phone calls with colleagues, watching TV.
But then there's me.
When all that external noise falls away, I fill it with podcasts, TV, YouTube, music, voice messages to friends. I am always filling the void.
I keep picturing ten o'clock on that Friday morning.
No meetings?
No husband in the next room?
No agenda?
Just coffee growing cold somewhere in the house and no particular reason to be anywhere.
Just open-ended moments.
Who I am when nobody even wants anything from me.
My mother is gone.
My grandmother is gone.
My aunt is gone.
The first time we spent a night apart, they were all still here.
And, for now, my husband is simply my husband. In the next room. Going on a road trip. Mowing the grass. Stopping at the gas station.
Footsteps echoing from the other side of the house.
But a thirty-six-year age gap has a way of making the future feel less hypothetical.
Maybe that's what feels so strange about next Friday.
Not that he will be gone temporarily.
That someday he will truly be gone forever.
For one quiet Friday, I find myself staring at the smallest possible version of that reality.
No work. No husband. Just me.
Maybe that's what feels so strange about the whole thing.
Not being alone, but remembering I will eventually have to re-learn how.