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Get Your Shit Together!

Some years ago I was attending a Pride event in Manhattan, one of those crowded gatherings where the music is loud, the drinks are flowing, and the energy oscillates somewhere between celebration and emotional release. At one point I stepped outside to smoke a cigarette, needing a brief break from the noise and the density of people inside. While I was standing there, I noticed another man nearby who appeared to be doing the same thing—taking a quiet moment away from the crowd. He seemed to be by himself, lingering near the edge of the sidewalk. I got the impression he had arrived with friends but had separated from them for a moment of solitude. What caught my attention first was that he was young and strikingly handsome, with a very distinctive look. The sort of person who, from the outside, appeared to have a lot going for him. The type of person people often assume is moving through life with ease. But there was something else about him that contradicted that impression. He looked troubled. Not dramatically so, but in the quiet way someone looks when they are carrying something heavy internally. His posture was withdrawn, his expression distant. It didn’t seem like he was having a particularly good day. I offered him a cigarette. He accepted, and we stood there for a moment in silence. Eventually I asked, casually, what was going on. I didn’t want to pry or make him uncomfortable, but sometimes a small moment of connection can make a difference. After a pause he said something that caught me off guard. “Nothing seems to be working out,” he said. Then he looked at me and added, almost dismissively, “You have a boyfriend, you have muscles, you have it all together… you wouldn’t understand.”

I remember being taken aback by that statement, not because it was insulting, but because it revealed something fascinating. In that moment I realized that what people see when they look at me is often very different from what I know to be true about my own life. So I responded honestly. “I hate to break it to you,” I told him, “but I don’t have it all together…and if you look around this bar, most of the people here are emotionally stunted in some way and probably going through a version of what you’re experiencing. You’re not as alone as you think.”

We talked briefly after that. I don’t know whether the conversation helped him or not. It’s possible it did, or perhaps it simply passed the time for a few minutes before we both went back inside. I’ll never really know. But the interaction stayed with me because it raised a deeper question. What does it actually mean to “have your shit together”?  The phrase gets thrown around constantly, yet the criteria behind it are rarely examined. Is it financial success? Is it influence? Is it physical attractiveness, social status, or having a romantic partner? Is it landing the dream job or achieving public recognition? Society often equates these visible markers with personal stability. If someone appears successful from the outside, we assume that their internal life must be equally organized. But that assumption collapses quickly when you begin to look more closely.

Consider someone like Elon Musk. By almost any external measure, he represents the ultimate example of someone who should have his life perfectly together. He is the wealthiest individual in human history. He runs multiple globally influential companies. He is widely recognized as highly intelligent, and when he speaks, the entire world pays attention. On the surface, that sounds like the textbook definition of success. Yet when you examine some of his public behavior, contradictions begin to emerge. Despite possessing enormous influence and the ability to shape the future of technology and humanity, he frequently appears preoccupied with petty internet feuds, childish trolling behavior, impulsive commentary, and political controversies that fall far beneath someone in his position. His public persona often reveals a fragile ego, questionable judgment, and a lack of emotional intelligence that stands in stark contrast to his intellectual and professional achievements.

When those elements sit side by side, the picture becomes more complicated. If the wealthiest and arguably most influential man on earth still appears emotionally unsettled, then what exactly are we measuring when we say someone “has their shit together”?

Money clearly isn’t the answer. Fame isn’t either. Expanding upon that, physical attractiveness doesn’t guarantee emotional stability, and neither does professional success. Perhaps the truth is that no one has it completely together. What we are really witnessing when we think someone does is simply a well-managed exterior, a collection of visible signals that suggest stability from a distance. Beneath that surface, most people are navigating the same uncertainties, insecurities, and evolving challenges that everyone else faces.

That young man outside the Pride event assumed I had life figured out because of what he saw on the surface. But appearances rarely capture the full complexity of a person’s internal world. If anything, the more honest answer may be this: having your shit together isn’t a permanent state. It’s a temporary alignment of circumstances, effort, and emotional balance that shifts constantly as life unfolds. Most of us, whether we admit it or not, are simply doing our best to keep that balance from tipping too far in any one direction.

#GetYourShitTogether, #HardTruths, #SelfReflection, #PersonalAccountability, #WakeUpCall, #LifeLessons, #MomentsOfClarity, #HumanBehavior, #NightlifeReflections, #PrideReflections, #LGBTQVoices, #GayPerspective, #UrbanMoments, #ManhattanNights, #RealTalk, #PersonalGrowth, #InnerWork, #ReflectiveWriting, #ThoughtfulWriting, #LifeObservations, #HonestConversations, #HumanExperience, #DepthOverNoise, #IdeasWorthExploring

tags: #GetYourShitTogether, #HardTruths, #SelfReflection, #PersonalAccountability, #WakeUpCall, #LifeLessons, #MomentsOfClarity, #HumanBehavior, #NightlifeReflections, #PrideReflections, #LGBTQVoices, #GayPerspective, #UrbanMoments, #ManhattanNights, #RealTalk, #PersonalGrowth, #InnerWork, #ReflectiveWriting, #ThoughtfulWriting, #LifeObservations, #HonestConversations, #HumanExperience, #DepthOverNoise, #IdeasWorthExploring
Friday 06.05.26
Posted by FRESKO IMAGEWORKS
 

Do the Sins of the Father Follow the Son?

There is a particular kind of inheritance that has nothing to do with money, property, or even genetics. It is reputational. It travels ahead of you into rooms you have never entered. It attaches itself to your name before you have spoken a word. For much of my early adult life, I carried that inheritance.

My father was many things: a talented photographer, charismatic and perceptive behind a camera. He was also a con man, a criminal, and a violent sociopath. The duality was not abstract — it was lived. I experienced the physical and psychological abuse firsthand. Then came neglect. Then abandonment. The arc moved from volatility to absence, which in its own way was equally destabilizing.

What complicated this further was that I did not merely survive him privately. I traveled publicly with his name. In certain circles, particularly those adjacent to photography and creative industries, his reputation preceded me. There were people he had wronged financially. Others he had betrayed personally. Some who had been manipulated or intimidated. And more than once, I was treated not as an autonomous individual, but as an extension of him — a proxy against whom grievances could be projected.

There is something uniquely disorienting about being held responsible for transgressions you neither committed nor condoned. Especially when you were also a victim of the same person. The question emerges: Do the sins of the father follow the son everywhere?

At first, it felt as though they did. I moved defensively. I over-explained. I distanced myself almost compulsively from anything that might resemble him — stylistically, temperamentally, professionally. I feared replication, both in the eyes of others and within myself. But time introduced nuance.

I began to recognize that while reputations can travel, character is demonstrated. Repeatedly. Quietly. Over years. Integrity is not inherited; it is practiced. And over time, patterns speak louder than lineage.

There is also a deeper psychological reckoning: the fear of becoming what harmed you. Children of volatile parents often live with a hypervigilant awareness of their own behavior. I examined my anger. My ambition. My ego. Was any of it a seed of him?

Therapy helped untangle that fear. Traits are not destiny. Temperament is not fate. Consciousness interrupts repetition. What I eventually understood is this: stigma may follow, but it does not define. The burden is real, but it is not permanent. Distance is created through consistency; through transparency; through living differently. There are still moments when the association surfaces. When someone asks, carefully, “Are you related to…?” And I answer honestly. I no longer flinch.

I cannot erase his history. I cannot rewrite the damage he caused others or me. But I can refuse to carry his guilt as my own. The sins of the father may cast a shadow. But a shadow is not substance. It only persists when you stand in a certain light.

Move, and it shifts.

tags: #FamilyLegacy, #InheritedReputation, #SinsOfTheFather, #BreakingTheCycle, #FamilyHistory, #GenerationalInfluence, #IdentityAndLegacy, #ReputationMatters, #PersonalIdentity, #SelfDefinition, #GenerationalPatterns, #FamilyNarratives, #IntergenerationalStories, #PersonalReflection, #ReflectiveWriting, #PersonalEssay, #LifeReflections, #HumanDevelopment, #SelfAwareness, #InnerWork, #PersonalGrowth, #PhilosophyOfIdentity, #NarrativeIdentity, #ThoughtfulWriting, #IdeasWorthExploring
Friday 05.22.26
Posted by FRESKO IMAGEWORKS
 

Living with Pure O

When I was diagnosed at nineteen with obsessive compulsive disorder — specifically a form often referred to as “Pure O” — the classification was controversial. The idea that OCD could manifest primarily through intrusive thoughts rather than visible compulsions was debated. It is less controversial now, though not universally agreed upon within the mental health field.

Pure obsessional OCD centers on intrusive thoughts — unwanted, distressing mental images or ideas that conflict with one’s values. The absence of overt ritual does not mean the absence of compulsion; the rituals are internal: rumination, reassurance-seeking, mental review.

Living with intrusive thoughts is disorienting because they target what you care about most. Morality. Identity. Safety. The mind generates scenarios that feel alien and yet intensely personal. The mistake many make is assuming intrusive thoughts reflect hidden desire. They do not. They reflect anxiety attaching to significance.

Therapy reframed my relationship to thought. Not every idea requires analysis. Not every mental event is meaningful. Learning to allow thoughts without engaging them was transformative. There is humility in recognizing that the mind produces noise. Clarity emerges not from eliminating noise, but from refusing to fuse with it. Living with Pure O has made me more compassionate toward invisible struggles. Many battles occur entirely beneath the surface.

tags: #LivingWithPureO, #PureO, #OCDAwareness, #MentalHealthAwareness, #MentalHealthMatters, #ObsessiveCompulsiveDisorder, #IntrusiveThoughts, #Neurodiversity, #MentalWellness, #MentalHealthJourney, #SelfAwareness, #ReflectiveWriting, #ThoughtfulWriting, #PersonalEssay, #LifeWithOCD, #BreakingStigma, #MindfulMentalHealth, #InnerWork, #EmotionalAwareness, #PersonalGrowth, #MentalHealthSupport, #OCDRecovery, #DepthOverNoise, #IdeasWorthExploring, #MentalHealthReflection
Monday 04.13.26
Posted by FRESKO IMAGEWORKS
 

Motion Picture & Print Photography by FRANCISCO ESCOBAR