Bachelor in Paradise...Yikes.

Well. THAT'S not good. 

I'm going to include all the stories I (shamefully) read yesterday about what happened with everyone's favorite guilty pleasure spinoff, Bachelor in Paradise. The story definitely evolved over the course of the day from being about a producer suing Warner Brothers to a contestant suing WB. DeMario and Corinne's names were also both originally used, then the articles started redacting the Corinne's name because it now looks like Corinne is suing the production company as well. 

So. Read up and draw your own conclusions. For whatever it's worth, I think we can all conclude that even if this situation turns out to be innocent, Rachel was right to give DeMario the boot. This guy can't stay out of the scandalous spotlight. 

First this came out: http://perezhilton.com/2017-06-11-bachelor-in-paradise-corinne-olympios-demario-jackson-production-halted-filming-cancelled-reality-tv-drama#.WT30vOJOmEc

Then there's a TMZ article about it that I'm not going to link because it's gross and describes a lot of things that I don't want to know, so Google it if you're interested. 

And then this rounded out the day: http://people.com/tv/bachelor-in-paradise-demario-jackson-sexual-encounter/?utm_campaign=peoplemag&utm_source=facebook.com&utm_medium=social&xid=socialflow_facebook_peoplemag

What's gross to me is that producers have a protocol in place to step in if things get too drunk/out of control. WHY DO WE WATCH THIS SHOW, PEOPLE?? We are all trashboxes. I'm gonna go read my Bible. 

5 Things Friday: The Internet is Great.

Look, it's been a big week. We've had James Comey's hearings (whoa, btw), we've had lots of rain up this way, and all of that has made me a little Internet-browse-y for hilarious things. Luckily, I am a loser who spends just an inordinate amount of time on the World Wide Waste of Time, so I'm here to provide you with 5 things that will make you laugh or brighten your day. 

*Cheerleader style*

Ready? 

Okay! 

1. Snoop Dogg Narrating Planet Earth

If this doesn't make you laugh, I don't want to know you. I'm serious, let me know if it doesn't so we can stop associating with each other. 

2. Robert Irwin on Jimmy Fallon

This is the sweetest and best and Robert really is Steve reincarnated. Also BABY BLACK BEARS. Also also Jimmy Fallon is scared of the animal kingdom with is kind of hilarious. 

3. This family's story on Ellen

So I watched this in the car on the way back from my sister-in-law's wedding and I was just sobbing. Jordan thought something was medically wrong with me and was like, "Are you okay?? ARE YOU OKAY??" But I had headphones in so I wasn't listening. ...anyway it's incredible. 

4. Ellen's Staff Recaps the Ellen Episode of The Bachelorette

It's just funny and stupid and that girl reacts pretty much exactly like I do. 

5. Lil' Baby Aidy Being Adorable

Listen, I really only had four things, so this is a throwaway but also something that made me giggle. I love Aidy. And I love SNL. AND I HOPE YOU DO TOO. 

 

Have a great weekend, peeps! I'm going to my ten year reunion which makes me want to throw up that I've been out of school for ten years. Why?! WHY?!?! 

Kodak Moment Syndrome.

I'm Mary Catherine, and I suffer from an illness that I have invented, but believe is a real thing. 

(Hi, Mary Catherine.) 

It is called Kodak Moment Syndrome - KMS for short. And I already lied, because I didn't invent it. Jordan named it, but it's been going on for many moons. I have a feeling some of you readers are also suffering. 

Lemme explain it fuh ya: 

KMS occurs when you are so fixated on the version of your life that you envisioned in your head - the pretty, Hallmark-y, perfectly lit version - that you miss the fact that what's happening around you is important, precious, and fleeting. In its worst form, KMS can lead you to dismiss - even damn - your reality because it's not what you expected it to look like. Common symptoms of KMS include: social anxiety, entitlement, inability to be present in daily situations, daydreaming, and general unhappiness. 

It can exist in big ways and in small ways. For example, maybe you think back on a significant moment in your life and think, "That was a let-down." In its more common form, KMS sneaks up on us during our daily work and living. We wish our lives looked different, and we resent that they aren't what we thought they'd be. 

KMS is very easy to develop in your twenties. It triggers everyone in different ways: for some, it's seeing peers whose careers have taken off; for others, it's visiting friends whose houses are perfectly curated down to the last knick knack. And you might be thinking, "That's envy - that's not KMS." If it's a momentary jealousy, you're right. But if it lingers - if it causes you to arrive back at your home, look around, and become terribly bitter at your imperfect house - to think, "How could I possibly make sweet memories in this place??" - then I'm afraid KMS is causing your reality to be disappointing to you in a way that's changing how happy you are in your everyday life.

Battling KMS can be challenging, but you aren't alone. There are easy steps you can follow.

The first way to battle Kodak Moment Syndrome is to TALK ABOUT IT. KMS thrives in solitude. It grows best when it goes undiscussed - exposure, much like light to film, causes it to fade away. You are great at telling yourself that you aren't good enough, smart enough, thin enough, good looking enough, or successful enough. But I'm willing to bet that the folks around you are great at telling you otherwise; in other words, they're great at telling you the truth. 

The second way to fight back against the nastiness that is KMS is to reverse the cycle. When you arrive home after seeing that friend's gorgeous home and start to think, "This house is a disaster and I'm embarrassed of myself," stop right there. There are things to be grateful for that you are totally missing like: YOU HAVE A PLACE TO LIVE. I know, all-caps is aggressive, but Y'ALL! Seriously!! If you're having car trouble: "I'm so thankful I have a car at all." If you are slogging around at the grocery store not wanting to complete the day's shopping: "The ability to buy food for my family is such a luxury." Your kids' toys all over the floor, food dried on plates in the sink, a crappy car in the driveway, but a happy marriage? Win. Going to a job you don't like every day, but you have your health and the ability to look for something else? Win. Etc. 

Find the joy. It is ALWAYS, always, always, always there. It may not be apparent, but it's there. 

(Don't confuse this with "Something horrific has happened to me and Mary Catherine is telling me to get over and find the joy." That is not what I'm saying at all. You wallow around in that as long as you feel like it. I'm talkin' about the mundane, everyday ways we let our expectations of reality diminish the sweetness of messy, actual reality.) 

The truth is that KMS comes from thinking about how other people are going to perceive your life, and whether it measures up to expectations that, more often than not, we didn't actually come up with ourselves. We follow this roadmap into what other people might think all the way off a cliff, because we'd rather use that yardstick to measure our lives than to look around and pay attention to the jewels in the mud all around us. 

Side effects of conquering KMS include: presence, gratefulness, a lower threshold for happiness, spontaneous laughter, a charitable heart, a rise in energy level, generosity, and an others-first paradigm.

Y'all? We have to quit wasting our lives being pouty because they aren't how we thought they'd look. Nothing is ever exactly what we thought it was going to look like. We have to get over it and start violently fighting to hang onto the magic that is BEING ALIVE. Jordan and I have a phrase we say to each other. "Acute dissatisfaction is a symptom of ambition; chronic dissatisfaction is a symptom of ungratefulness." We always try to keep in mind that if one of us gets bluesy about something for too long, it's not ambition - it's brattiness. I'm grateful to have someone to keep me in check, and I know he is, too. 

You may not have the job you thought you would, or look the way you thought you would, or make the check you thought you would. Fine. It's okay to go for those things. Be ambitious. Be unsatisfied. But don't let expectation and comparison steal your joy on the way to whatever it is you want to be. There's so much life between now and then, and...what was that philosopher's famous quote? 

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