Some people knit. I built an empire out of triggers and goat jokes.
I used to process quietly.
Cried on sidewalks.
Wrote poetic metaphors no one read.
Poured my breakdowns into private folders named “DO NOT OPEN (EVER).”
But then I thought—
Why should my suffering be a secret
when it has better one-liners than most sitcoms?
So I hit “post.”
And the world hit “like.”
And then?
It hit “buy now.”
Turns out, if you wrap your rock bottom in the right font,
you can print it on a hoodie
and ship it worldwide.
Because pain?
Pain is universal.
But mine comes with custom captions,
AI narration,
and a goat named Gigi
who answers trauma comments like a sarcastic emotional support animal.
I didn’t go public for clout.
I went public because silence wasn’t working.
Because crying in a locked room
doesn’t pay for therapy,
but a “Sorry I Vanished, I Had a Mental Collapse” sticker just might.
So I built a platform.
Out of confessions, chaos, and domain settings I had to Google.
I trademarked my triggers.
Added tip jars to my trauma.
And now even my worst days
have tracking numbers.
Healing didn’t look like a yoga retreat.
It looked like Wix tutorials, breakdown timestamps,
and branding the exact moments they told me I’d never recover.
Now I have merch.
A mailing list.
And a content calendar labeled “Survival, monetized.”
And if anyone asks,
“What’s your niche?”
I tell them:
“Pain. But make it hilarious, printable, and occasionally animated.”
I didn’t just post my story.
I published it.
And it’s still unfolding—
one receipt at a time.
I Took My Pain Public — And Made It Profitable
My cries went viral. My truth went wide.
Now trauma’s got merch and memes with pride.
They judged me loud? I cashed that hate—
And now I own their clickbait fate.
The posts that shamed became my throne,
And every scar? Trademarked, full-blown.
So click and scroll. This wound’s for sale—
And healing’s now a fairytale.
—The Funny Phoenix, selling strength by the syllable
