“It is wise to believe something wonderful

is about to happen”. ~Anonymous

Welcome to Surviving with Dr. Chrissie — a space where truth meets healing and survival turns into purpose. I created this platform to give voice to the stories we’re often told to silence — the ones shaped by trauma, resilience, faith, and the long road to becoming whole again. Here, we talk about real life: the hard days, the messy healing, and the moments of grace that remind us we’re still standing. Through honest conversations, survivor stories, and a little bit of humor and hope, Surviving with Dr. Chrissie is more than a podcast or a blog — it’s a community. Because surviving isn’t the end of the story; it’s where the rebuilding begins.

Observing Society

Today, I took a moment to sit and observe the world around me, and what I saw hit me harder than I expected. Everyone was on their phones. Eyes down. Faces blank. Entire families are sitting together, yet they are completely disconnected. It was like watching people exist in separate universes while standing inches apart. We’ve become so sucked into our screens that we’re missing the life happening right in front of us. The laughter of our kids. The way the sun feels on our skin. The power of actual conversation. We scroll and scroll, hoping to feel something — but maybe what we need is to look up.

It’s so different from how I grew up in the ’90s. Back then, connection didn’t come from Wi-Fi — it came from riding bikes until the streetlights came on, knocking on your friend’s door to see if they could come outside, or staying up late talking on the house phone with a tangled cord wrapped around your fingers. We didn’t have instant access to everyone, but somehow, we felt closer. Life was slower, fuller, and more present. We weren’t distracted by constant notifications or curated highlight reels — we were just living, messy, and real.

Now, I look around, and it feels like we’re losing that. Losing the art of being bored. The joy of showing up unannounced. The beauty of looking someone in the eye and giving them your full attention. I miss the simplicity of it all. And while I love that technology can connect us, I sometimes wonder if it’s also what’s pulling us further apart.

One response

  1. So true. I found myself in this recently and had to take a step back. I didn’t want to miss the simple, beautiful moments—only to look back one day and realize I was never really present.

    With the way everything is going digital, it’s so easy to get caught up in work, goals, and the constant hustle. But in the midst of it all, we often forget that relationships and the people right in front of us are what matter most in each moment.

    It’s honestly messy and a bit wild when you really think about it.

    Like

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