All-new Cartoon, “Worth It!”
Wishing everyone a very nice relaxing Sunday!
As always, stay creative, safe, and healthy.
Fabien





All-new Cartoon, “Worth It!”
Wishing everyone a very nice relaxing Sunday!
As always, stay creative, safe, and healthy.
Fabien





New Cartoon, “Worth It”
Wishing everyone a very nice relaxing Sunday!
As always, stay creative, safe, and healthy.
Fabien





All-new Spice of Life cartoon, “You Don’t Say!”
Wishing everyone a very nice relaxing Sunday.
As always, stay creative, safe, and healthy.
Fabien





All-new Spice of Life, “You Don’t Say”
Wishing everyone a very nice relaxing Sunday.
As always, stay creative, safe, and healthy.
Fabien





Gentle reader,
MamaCat is sipping her coffee and very quietly shaking with rage. The old me, the Diana of a year ago, say, would have put her fist through something and been on the phone to somebody by now. Today’s me, who lives on a couch in New York, is intellectually prepared and so is able to process this by coming to you.
As we sit this morning, I am, incredibly, still married.
The…


I remember the morning it hit me. My husband and I had been married for eight years, and what used to feel like effortless connection had quietly slipped into routine. We still said “I love you,” but the words felt automatic, like checking off a to-do list. One Tuesday, after a sleepless night arguing about something trivial like whose turn it was to unload the dishwasher, I looked at him across the kitchen table and realized: love hadn’t disappeared—it had just stopped being chosen.
That moment changed everything for me. I understood that happy marriages aren’t built on the big romantic gestures we see in movies. They’re sustained by the quiet, daily decision to choose love daily in marriage. It’s not always easy, especially when life gets stressful or conflicts arise, but it’s the golden rule for a happy married life that has transformed my own relationship and the ones I’ve seen thrive around me.
If you’re in a marriage where things feel flat, or you’re a newlywed wondering how to keep the spark, or even if you’re struggling with communication right now—this is for you. Let’s talk about what it really means to choose love daily, why passive love leads so many couples astray, and how small, intentional choices can rebuild emotional connection in marriage and keep love alive long after the wedding vows.
I used to think love was something that happened to me—like falling into a warm pool on a hot day. But after years of marriage, I realized that’s only the start. Real, lasting love is an action I take every single day, even when I’m tired, frustrated, or hurt.
Choosing love daily means deciding, in the small moments, to prioritize my partner’s well-being over my ego. It’s saying yes to patience when I want to snap back. It’s listening when I’d rather scroll my phone. It’s forgiving before resentment builds a wall.
Psychology backs this up. Studies on commitment show that intentional love in relationships—making conscious efforts even when feelings dip—creates secure attachment. Partners who view commitment as daily effort report higher satisfaction because they actively invest in the bond rather than assuming it will survive on autopilot.
In my marriage, this shift happened gradually. I started noticing how often I let little things slide—assuming he’d know I cared without showing it. When I began choosing love intentionally, everything changed. The emotional safety we both craved returned.
I see it all too often, and I’ve lived it. Marriages don’t usually explode in dramatic fights; they fade quietly when love turns passive. One partner stops reaching out, the other stops responding, and soon indifference creeps in.
Research shows that when couples stop nurturing connection, emotional intimacy fades first. Without daily effort, resentment builds from unmet needs, and partners feel unseen. Stress spills over, amplifying disconnection—partners withdraw, conflicts escalate, and satisfaction plummets.
In my own experience, passive love looked like this: We’d go days without real conversation because “we were fine.” But we weren’t. The friendship that once anchored us eroded, replaced by routine. Passive love assumes feelings will carry the relationship, but feelings fluctuate. Without choice, love starves.
The beauty of intentional love is how it rebuilds what stress tears down. When I choose love daily, I create emotional safety—my partner knows I’m on their team.
Attachment theory explains this: Consistent, responsive actions build secure bonds. Small choices—like turning toward a bid for connection (a smile, a sigh, a question)—accumulate into deeper emotional connection in marriage.
For us, this meant rebuilding through conscious effort. I started asking about his day with genuine curiosity, not obligation. He responded by sharing vulnerabilities he’d hidden. Our intimacy grew not from grand gestures but from daily presence.
Commitment isn’t a one-time vow; it’s renewed daily. Psychologists describe committed partners as making intentional efforts during conflict and stress—prioritizing the relationship over self-interest.
When love is chosen actively, forgiveness comes easier, accommodation increases, and unity strengthens. Studies show highly committed couples express more affection, feel interdependent, and sacrifice willingly.
In practice, this looks like deciding to soften during an argument instead of escalating. I learned that my commitment shows in how I respond when feelings are low—choosing kindness over winning.
Rebuilding emotional intimacy in marriage starts with choice. When intimacy fades—often from stress or routine—intentional actions revive it.
I rebuilt ours by:
These choices signal safety, encouraging openness. Over time, physical and emotional closeness returned.
Conflicts test our choices. I used to fight to be right; now I fight for us.
How to choose love during conflict: Pause, breathe, ask “What does love look like here?” Listen without defending. Use “I feel” statements. Seek understanding before solutions.
In one argument about finances, instead of blaming, I said, “I’m scared about our future—can we figure this together?” It shifted everything. Love won over ego.
Forgiveness is choosing love over resentment. Holding grudges erodes safety; releasing them rebuilds it.
I learned to forgive small hurts daily—before they compound. This creates space for vulnerability. Emotional safety means knowing mistakes won’t be weaponized.
Here are daily habits for a happy marriage that worked for me:
These habits compound, transforming routine into closeness.
Stress is a silent thief. Chronic stress raises cortisol, leading to withdrawal, irritability, reduced intimacy.
When stressed, I used to shut down. Now I choose love by signaling: “I’m overwhelmed, but I still choose us.” We tag-team stress—listening, comforting.
Managing stress together protects connection.
Trust rebuilds through consistent choices: Reliability, transparency, apologies.
After a breach (even small), I focus on repair—owning impact, making amends, changing behavior. Emotional closeness follows safety.
Right now, pause. Think of your partner—the person you chose, the one who chose you. Remember the moments when love felt effortless, and the harder ones too.
Today, choose love again. Not because it’s easy, but because it’s worth it. Send that text, offer that hug, listen without interrupting. Forgive what lingers. Start small, but start today.
Your marriage isn’t perfect—mine isn’t either. But every daily choice stacks toward something beautiful: a love that’s deeper, safer, more real than the day you said “I do.”
You have the power. Choose love daily. Watch what blooms.
This article shares my personal reflections and practical insights drawn from experience and relationship research, intended for education and inspiration. Every marriage is unique, and what works for one couple may need adjustment for another.
If you’re facing deep pain, ongoing conflict, trust issues, or emotional distress, please reach out to a licensed therapist or couples counselor. Professional support can provide tailored guidance and healing space. You’re not alone, and seeking help is a profound act of love—for yourself and your relationship.
With warmth and hope

The Real Meaning of the Vow.
A quiet, powerful moment between a mature married couple, dressed elegantly for a private celebration in a warm, luxurious setting.
Valentine’s Day isn’t just for new romance. The real meaning is found here—in the quiet confidence of a couple who have built a life, a home, and a legacy together. It’s the celebration of a legal and spiritual bond that has stood the test of time. They aren’t dressing up for the world; they are dressing up to honor the commitment they made to each other.

All-new Spice of Life, “Debbie’s Ghost” Part 3
Even coffee won’t help Debbie’s anxiety over the past evening.
Wishing everyone a very safe, warm, relaxing Sunday!
As always, stay creative, and healthy.
Fabien







All-new Spice of Life, Debbie’s Ghost" Part 2
Debbie thinks she’s having a horrible nightmare.
Hope everyone is enjoying their Sunday. Stay warm everyone.
As always, stay creative, safe, and healthy.
Fabien










Return of the Spice of Life.
It’s been over six months since we last heard of Debbie. Here is a recap as narrated by Johhny Spice.
Wishing everyone a very nice relaxing Sunday. Stay safe and warm.
As,always, stay creative, safe, and healthy.
Fabien
All-new Spice of Life, “Debbie’s Ghost” Part 3
Debbie believes she had a nightmare regarding Paul.
Wishing everyone a very safe, warm, and relaxing Sunday!
As always, stay creative, safe, and healthy.
Fabien







its 2026 and life has been life-ing.
Lets see…let me get you up to speed. Since my last post, I think i was a couple months into living in the world of COVID in NYC. oof
We moved into a bigger apartment in October 2020.
My parents basically split up. My dad kicked my mom out. Dad is pure trauma for me. Mom lived with us for a about two years. She had knee surgery and had to stay in a rehab/nursing home.
We got her to live there soon after. It was a relief but still a challange.
Ethan and I got married Sept 2023. Even though about two weeks before Ethan was practically dying from low Hemoglobin levels. Had a couple blood transfusions and he was out and recovering.
I got transferred to another store to prepare to open another store.
We went to NOLA for our Halloween Honeymoon 2023.
I got pregnant about 6 months later. Opened a store while pregnant. Tried to NOT Stress throughout my pregnancy in this stressful world.
Gave birth to the most beautiful baby girl on Valentine’s Day 2024. Oh my sweet Eloise <3
Today, a couple days after my 35th birthday. I have a wonderful husband. We go to couples therapy. I still go to therapy. I have a 11 month old who is an absolute doll. My mom is still in a nursing home, health declining. My first cat passed away. I’m living this life and I’m trying.
Thats a good update…i think?
All-new Spice of Life, “Debbie’s Ghost” Part 2
Debbie gets a shocking confirmation from Alley the cat.
Wishing everyone a very nice relaxing Sunday!
As always, stay creative, safe, and healthy.
Fabien









Happy 11th Anniversary to My Beautiful Wife Jen!!! #happyanniversary #celebration #marriedlife #growing
WHO WILL TELL MY WIFE I’M RIGHT, THE REAL MISSION IMPOSSIBLE #50LAM_HUMOR
A sharp, ironic reflection on the eternal struggle of being “right” in a relationship — and never being acknowledged for it. “Who’s going to explain to my wife that I’m right” isn’t just a funny statement, it’s a cry for justice (or at least some backup). In every couple, the dynamics of communication, pride, and love create a hilarious battlefield where being right often means absolutely nothing. This phrase humorously highlights how truth can become secondary to diplomacy and emotional intelligence in a relationship. It’s the universal dilemma of the misunderstood husband and the comedic tragedy of logic versus love. With wit and just a dash of sarcasm, this thought captures the delicate art of arguing without ever winning. After all, sometimes being “right” is the loneliest place to be.
#relationshiphumor #marriedlife #whosright #husbandlogic #ironictruth #comedyinlove #marriagewars #domesticdiplomacy #truelovewins #sarcasmlife
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