You wanna come for me? I’ll sell tickets.
You thought you were delivering destruction.
Nah—turns out you were doing warm-up for my one-woman show.
Your manipulation? My opening act.
Your silence? Now a sound cue.
Your smear campaign? Just marketing I didn’t have to pay for.
Every moment I thought I was crumbling?
Turns out I was just crafting material.
Trauma with a twist ending. Laughter with a backstory.
That time I got ghosted mid-crisis?
Now it’s a 5-minute bit that gets standing ovations.
That support group that couldn’t handle me?
They’re now a footnote under “audience too sensitive.”
You tried to break me?
Congratulations—you built a legend.
Because the thing about surviving sh*tstorms is:
eventually, you stop dodging lightning
and start using it to charge your mic.
Your betrayal? B-roll.
Your gaslighting? GIF material.
Your fake concern? Framed and hung in the merch booth.
I don’t erase what happened.
I subtitle it.
With comedic timing and a goat in the background.
Pain gave me a platform.
Your chaos gave me quotes.
And my healing?
Now has background music, a lighting rig,
and an emotionally haunted tip jar labeled
“F*ck Around and Find Out Fund.”
So if you ever wonder
how I got so sharp, so bold, so funny—
It’s because you handed me the script.
I just edited the ending,
added punchlines,
and took center stage.
Now selling tickets. Front row comes with Kleenex and a T-shirt.
Everything That Tried to Break Me Is Now Punchline Material
You broke me, bent me, cracked my frame,
Congrats, you made me meme my name.
I stitched the pain, I spit the wit—
Now guess who profits off your sh*t?
You sent the storm, I made a show.
You hit delete, I made it grow.
So welcome back—I’m still not tame.
Your chaos paid to build my flame.
—The Funny Phoenix, laughing all the way to the trauma bank
