Tag Archives: writing

When the Air Becomes the Enemy: A Hashimoto’s Tale of Inflammation, Fragrance, and Fighting for Your Life



The day the air turned on her, it smelled like “Spring Meadow.”

The can hissed in her hand, leaving a cold kiss of propellant on her fingers as the droplets hung in the kitchen like invisible confetti. For a brief second, it did exactly what the label promised: the trash can odor retreated, the sour note of last night’s leftovers faded, and the room filled with something light and floral.

Then her throat tightened.

It began as a small scratch, the sort you might blame on dust or a forgotten sip of water. But it bloomed quickly into a raw, rasping burn that crawled up the back of her tongue. Her nose tingled. A headache pricked at her temples, sharp as a hatpin. The “Spring Meadow” thickened, heavy and artificial, clinging to the back of her teeth until she could taste it—sweet, chemical, wrong.

Her heart sped up.

The kitchen light, once soft and warm, suddenly seemed harsh. Every hum in the house grew louder: the refrigerator motor, the overhead fan, the faint buzz of a forgotten charger in the outlet. Her skin prickled as if the very air were full of tiny needles. Heat rose in her chest—not the flush of embarrassment, but the hot surge of inflammation.

She set the can down, feeling her hands tremble.

“This isn’t normal,” she whispered to no one.

But her body knew. A body with Hashimoto’s always knows.

Inside her neck, behind the familiar hollow at the base of her throat, her thyroid tried to keep up. It was already swollen, attacked daily by her own immune system, exhausted from years of being overworked and misunderstood. The chemicals floating through her house—phthalates, synthetic musks, endocrine disruptors disguised as “Fresh,” “Crisp,” and “Clean”—were just one more insult.

Her head grew heavier, like someone had put a sandbag behind her eyes.
The fatigue washed in next, slow and tidal, urging her to sit before the floor rose up to meet her.

She opened a window in desperation.

The cold air outside bit her cheeks and flooded her lungs, bringing the sharp scent of wet pavement and car exhaust. Not ideal, no, but somehow still cleaner than the fake meadow now trapped in the curtains, the cushions, the couch.

It was then she realized a cruel truth:

It wasn’t just food or stress or her broken immune system working against her.

Even her air had become the enemy.


She didn’t find the lamp right away. First came the usual prescriptions: “Just use less,” “Try a different brand,” “It’s all in your head,” “You’re anxious,” “You’re sensitive.” Words she had already collected from doctors about her thyroid, now repackaged for the air she breathed.

But a body with hypothyroidism is not merely “sensitive.” It is a battlefield.

Inflammation does not care about marketing.
Hormones do not care what the label says.
Thyroid receptors do not read “eco-friendly” stamps on plastic bottles.

What they do respond to are signals—chemical messages that say:
“Slow down your metabolism,”
“Confuse your immune system,”
“Interrupt your hormone balance.”

And modern air fresheners speak that language fluently.

One evening, deep in a late-night spiral of “air fresheners hormone disruption” and “Hashimoto’s fragrance sensitivity,” she found it: a picture of a small glass lamp, crowned by a curious stone burner. Originally invented to purify hospital air, long before spray cans and plug-ins.

A Lamp Berger, they called it.

The article explained how, instead of coating odors with perfumes, this little lamp used catalytic combustion to break down odor molecules. The fuel could be as simple as alcohol and water. And if one wished, a touch of essential oil—light and sparse—could be added.

No propellants.
No artificial musk.
No mystery mixture of “trade secret” fragrance chemicals.

She stared at the photo. A device from another century that might, in the strangest of twists, save her in this one.

The next week, it arrived in a small box: cool glass, a simple wick, a stone that looked like it belonged in a Victorian apothecary.

She poured her first batch of non-toxic fuel:
9 ounces of isopropyl alcohol, 1 ounce of distilled water. No scent. No risk.
She lit the stone, waited the prescribed two minutes, blew out the flame, and let the invisible reaction begin.

The air changed slowly.

There was no explosion of “meadow” or “ocean breeze.” Instead, the heaviness faded. The room became…blank. As if someone had scrubbed the air with a quiet hand.

For the first time in years, she breathed without bracing for the consequences.

Her skin did not itch.
Her heart did not race.
Her throat did not close like a frightened fist.

The enemy had been disarmed, not by another spray, but by a process that respected her endocrine system and her inflamed, weary body.

In time, she became bolder. A drop of lavender here, a whisper of chamomile there. Never more than a few drops in a full lamp of fuel. She learned which oils her body tolerated and which ones made her temples tighten. She learned that some days, pure unscented air was still her favorite blend.

She learned that healing, for someone with Hashimoto’s, meant not only managing food and medicine, but choosing air that doesn’t attack you.

Her life did not suddenly become perfect. Hashimoto’s still had its moods. Inflammation still had its storms. But she had taken back one of the most basic things a human being needs: the right to breathe without harm.

And as she watched the little lamp glow on the sideboard—its stone cooling under the snuffer—she realized:

Sometimes, survival is not dramatic.
Sometimes, it is quiet.
A woman. A lamp. A choice not to inhale what the world tells her is “normal.”

Sometimes, fighting for your life looks like refusing to let the air become your enemy.


 Books by A.L. Childers That Celebrate Light, Truth, and Becoming

Here are a few of mine that walk this path of illumination—with all its shadows:

The Lamp of Christmas Eve

The Lamp at the End of the Corridor: A Story of Rejection, Redirection, and Resurrection for the Misfit Soul

And many more at: amazon.com/author/alchilders

  • REFERENCES & RESOURCES
    Archives on Lampe Berger history (French perfuming journals)
    Essential oil safety data from Tisserand Institute
    Indoor air safety documentation (Poison Control & EPA)
    Veterinary sources regarding pets + scented products

     DISCLAIMER
    Use essential oils lightly. Consult a veterinarian for sensitive pets.
    This guide is for educational purposes only; always operate catalytic lamps responsibly.

    ABOUT THE AUTHOR
    A.L. Childers, a modern chronicler of home alchemy and clean living, blends old-world storytelling with practical wisdom. Her guides revive the forgotten art of non-toxic fragrance and the elegance of mindful homemaking in a chaotic world.

A Small Light in the Darkest Winter — And Why We Still Need Christmas Magic

The Lamp of Christmas Eve

There’s something strange that happens every December.

Not the shopping, not the lights, not the frantic countdown to the 25th.

I’m talking about the quiet hours — the ones nobody posts on Instagram.

The moments when the world feels heavier than usual…
When the cold settles deeper…
When memories drift in like snowflakes — soft, beautiful, and sometimes painful.

It’s during these small, unguarded moments that I’ve always noticed something miraculous:

We start looking for light again.

Not the kind that twinkles on trees,
but the kind that warms the heart.
The kind that reminds you you’re not alone.
The kind that shows up unexpectedly, like a lantern glowing in a long-forgotten window.

Every year around this time, I find myself thinking about:

✨ the people who carry invisible burdens
✨ the children who wonder why the world feels so big
✨ the adults who are still healing from winters long past
✨ the quiet souls who show up for others
✨ the tiny moments of kindness that change everything

And somewhere in these reflections, a story found me.

Not a preachy story.
Not a perfect story.
But a gentle, human, hopeful story — the kind that feels like warm hands wrapped around a mug of cocoa on a cold night.

A story about a mysterious lamp that glows only for hearts in need…
A town stitched by grief and hope…
And a reminder that small lights matter more in dark seasons.

I won’t spoil it here — you know I’m not that kind of blogger. 😉
But if you’ve ever:

  • Felt the holidays were bittersweet
  • Missed someone you loved
  • Wondered if your kindness still mattered
  • Needed a soft place to land
  • Or wished Christmas could feel magical again

…then this little winter tale might find you at the right time too.

No pressure. No push.
You know me — I don’t like to shove books down anyone’s throat every time I write.

But if your heart is craving something gentle this season,
I’ll just leave this small light here:

👉 “The Lamp of Christmas Eve” by A.L. Childers

Sometimes one quiet story is enough to remind us:

Even in the coldest winters, light finds its way back.
And so do we.


A heartfelt winter reflection about finding hope in dark seasons, the quiet magic of Christmas, and the small lights that guide us. Includes a gentle introduction to The Lamp of Christmas Eve, a feel-good magical realism holiday story.


The Brighter You Shine, the Longer the Shadows: A Christmas Reflection for the Misfits, the Fighters, and the Ones Who Refuse to Dim

By A.L. Childers — the author who learned to glow anyway.



❄️ A Christmas Tale for Anyone Who Learned to Glow the Hard Way

It is a truth universally whispered—usually behind gloved hands at holiday gatherings—that the more a woman shines, the more shadows she casts.

Charles Dickens might have said it differently, of course. He’d lace it with soot, candle smoke, and the quiet scraping of ghosts past. But I, A.L. Childers, have lived enough winters to tell you plainly:

Light creates shadows.
And the brighter the soul, the darker the envy that gathers at its edges.

But oh… what a beautiful thing it is to shine anyway.

Imagine it: a warm Christmas streetlamp glowing against a bitter wind. The lamp doesn’t apologize for its glow. It doesn’t shrink when shadows stretch behind the feet of those who walk past. It doesn’t tremble when the snow falls harder, or when the darkness grows bolder.

It just does what it was born to do—
illuminate.

So do you.
So do I.
So does every woman who has crawled through a winter she didn’t think she’d survive.


🎄 The Shadows Always Arrive Before the Blessings

I learned long ago that shadows aren’t proof of failure—
they are evidence of illumination.

Every time I wrote a book that exposed truth (The Lies We Loved: How Advertising Invented America), someone felt the sting.
Every time I cracked open pain and rebuilt myself from the ashes, someone muttered that I was “too much.”
Every time I peeled back the curtain of power structures, propaganda, and hidden histories (The Hidden Empire, The Divide Machine ), another shadow stretched its long fingers across my path.

But darling…
shadows don’t form in the dark.
They form in your light.

If you cast a long shadow, it is only because you are standing tall.


🕯️ A Dickensian Reminder: Even Scrooge Needed a Ghost to Wake Him Up

Your glow may disturb someone’s slumber.
Your growth may unsettle their comfort.
Your becoming may haunt the people who preferred you small.

But Christmas—true Christmas—is not about hiding your light so others feel less cold. It’s about warmth, rebirth, and the quiet rebellion of refusing to stay buried.

In a world that profits from silence…
in a society shaped by advertising, fear, and the stories we were told to worship…
shining is a revolutionary act.

And if your brilliance wakes a few ghosts?
Good.
Some people need haunting.


🎁 Your Light is Your Gift — Don’t Wrap It in Apology

This season, I want you to do something bold:

Shine louder.
Shine wider.
Shine without shrinking.

Be the lamp in the snow that travelers seek when they’ve lost their way.
Be the warmth in a cold world.
Be the woman who refuses to dim so that others can stay comfortable in their shadows.

And if the shadows grow longer behind you?
Smile.
You’ve earned them.


Books by A.L. Childers That Celebrate Light, Truth, and Becoming

Here are a few of mine that walk this path of illumination—with all its shadows:

The Lamp of Christmas Eve

The Lamp at the End of the Corridor: A Story of Rejection, Redirection, and Resurrection for the Misfit Soul

And many more at: amazon.com/author/alchilders


✍️ About the Author

A.L. Childers writes by candlelight and conviction, weaving truth and fiction with the same steady hand. Born in the quiet South and raised by storms, she has written over 200 books spanning history, horror, wellness, rebellion, and the ache of being human.

During the holidays, she believes in three things:
second chances, hot tea, and the unstoppable brilliance of a woman who refuses to dim.


⚖️ Disclaimer:

This blog reflects personal observations, creative storytelling, and opinion-based reflections by author A.L. Childers. It is not intended as legal, medical, or historical advice. All references to books and themes are part of the author’s published works and creative portfolio.




When the Corridor Goes Dark: What We Discover in the Silence

There are seasons in life when the world grows unbearably quiet—
not the peaceful kind, but the sort of silence Dickens might describe as
“a hush heavy enough to hear one’s heart crack beneath it.”

It’s the hour when every door you’ve knocked on refuses to open,
when opportunity slips through your fingers like ash,
and when the universe seems to whisper nothing at all.

Or so you think.

Because I have learned—slowly, stubbornly, painfully—
that the universe rarely shouts its intentions.
It speaks in corridors.

Long ones.
Unlit ones.
The kind that make you believe you’ve wandered off the edge of your own life.

I once stood there, exactly where you might be standing now:
between who I was and who I wasn’t sure I’d ever become.

And in that dim hallway, I mistook silence for abandonment.
I mistook “not yet” for “not ever.”
I mistook the closing of doors as the closing of my fate.

But life, clever as any Dickens narrator,
was rewriting my story behind the scenes—
quietly shifting the scenery, moving characters in and out,
preparing a chapter I didn’t even know I was walking toward.

Because sometimes the miracle isn’t the door that opens.
It’s the one that shuts so loudly
it forces you down a path you never imagined.

A path where you rediscover the pieces of yourself
that disappointment tried to steal.

A path where you learn that misfits aren’t mistakes—
they’re prototypes.

A path where you understand that the slow bloom
is sometimes the most breathtaking.

And somewhere near the end of that shadowed corridor,
when you’re tired enough to stop pretending
and brave enough to start listening…

A small lamp flickers on.

Not blinding.
Not dramatic.
Just enough to guide your next step.

Just enough to remind you:
You were never walking alone.
You were being escorted.

If this truth finds you today—
in the rubble, in the ache, in the waiting—
then perhaps you, too, are approaching the lamp meant for you.

And if your soul needs a companion for that walk,
my newest work sits quietly beside you,
ready to place its own light in your hands.

👉 The Lamp at the End of the Corridor by A.L. Childers
A story for misfits, late bloomers, quiet fighters, and anyone standing in the hallway between who they were and who they’re becoming.




The Night the Corridor Went Dark — And the Light That Found Me Anyway

There are nights in a person’s life when the hallway stretches too long, too dim, too silent.
Nights when every door you knock on seems to whisper the same brutal sermon:

“Not here. Not yet. Not you.”

Society calls it rejection.
The poets call it despair.
But those of us who have walked barefoot across the shards of our own disappointments… we know better.

We know that some corridors are meant to feel endless.
Not because we are unworthy—
but because we are being escorted, ever so quietly, toward a door we would have never chosen for ourselves.

And oh, how childishly we beg to return to the previous rooms.

But life—like a stern, patient guardian—simply places one hand on the small of our back and says:

“Forward.”

So forward we go.

Dragging our doubts like suitcases.
Carrying our heart like a flickering lantern.
Pretending we don’t hear the echo of every “no” we’ve ever collected.

And then, in a moment so strange and tender it almost feels like a dream,
a small light appears.

Not a floodlight.
Not a revelation.
Just a lamp—the kind you almost miss if your chin is still tucked against your chest.

But if you dare to lift your eyes…

You see it.

A warm halo waiting at the end of the corridor you once cursed.

A reminder that you were not being punished. You were being protected.
That the doors that slammed in your face weren’t endings—
they were escorts into alignment.

That nothing stolen was meant for you,
and nothing meant for you will ever pass you by.

For every misfit soul, every late bloomer, every quiet fighter who has ever whispered,
“Why isn’t anything working?”
…this truth is your inheritance:

You were never being pushed out.
You were being ushered in.

You were never being rejected.
You were being recalibrated.

And the corridor that once felt like abandonment
was actually the birthplace of who you were becoming.

If you have ever felt lost,
forgotten,
misplaced,
misunderstood,
or beautifully out of place—

Then you, my friend, are already holding the lamp.

And the door is closer than you think.


🌞 ABOUT THE AUTHOR

A.L. Childers writes for the misfits, the seekers, the late bloomers, and the souls who refuse to give up—no matter how dark the hallway becomes. Known for her emotional honesty, cinematic storytelling, and timeless voice, she creates books that sit beside you in the shadows and hand you a light.


If this reflection touched the parts of you that rarely speak aloud…
and you want more of this kind of soul-deep storytelling,
You can continue the journey here:

👉 The Lamp at the End of the Corridor
A story of rejection, redirection, and resurrection for the misfit soul.

(Available on Amazon)




A Closed Door at the End of the Hall: A Lesson in Rejection, Protection, and Providence

By A.L. Childers — who has learned that fate often saves us by disappointing us first.


There are moments in every life — whether lived under gas lamps and cobblestone streets or beneath the whir of modern fluorescent lights — when the heart reaches for something with all its might… and yet the very thing it desires slips quietly from its grasp.

It is a universal experience, as old as humanity itself.
The job we longed for.
The chance we thought would change everything.
The door that seemed meant for us — only to shut with such finality we feel its echo in our bones.

So it was with me.

After offering my time, my enthusiasm, and my honest effort, I found myself waiting for a response that never came. They had promised a further interview — the kind that sits at the edge of hope like a candle trembling at the mercy of a cold draft — and yet no message arrived. No explanation. Only silence.

At first, the sting was sharp, as all disappointments are.
But as the dust settled, clarity emerged like a gentle hand upon the shoulder.

For this was not rejection.
No — this was protection.
A divine redirection.
A quiet form of correction.
A whisper of introspection.
A moment of holy intervention.

Life has its own rhyme —
“What you lose today is guarding your tomorrow.”

Sometimes a “no” is simply fate saying,
“Not here. Not that door. Not that sorrow.”


🌫️ The Door That Closed Was Never Mine

Had I entered it, I would have discovered:

  • A long and weary road
  • Endless hours of toil
  • Traffic that devours both time and spirit
  • A sameness of pay with a heaviness of burden
  • A workplace where communication faltered before employment even began

It was as if life whispered through the keyhole:

“Child, this door does not lead to your peace.”

And though Dickens wrote often of fate’s twists, this lesson is my own.
An A.L. Childers lesson — carved from hope, disappointment, and revelation.

Providence — though mysterious — is never unkind.
It simply sees what we cannot.


🌧️ Why We Want What We Want (And Why It Doesn’t Always Want Us Back)

Sometimes we pursue opportunities not out of passion, but out of pressure.

Bills gather like winter fog.
Responsibilities tap insistently at our conscience.
Fear of not-enough tightens around our hopes like a cold December wind.

We chase any door with a handle simply because it promises temporary warmth.

But not every warm door leads to a warm life.

Some doors hide storm clouds.
Some hide burnout.
Some hide futures we were never meant to carry.

And so fate — in its quiet, old-fashioned wisdom — closes it.

Not out of cruelty.
But out of care.

A closed door doesn’t punish you —
it protects you from what you can’t yet see.


🚪 The Hallway of Waiting Is Where Transformation Happens

When one door shuts, we stand in the hallway.
Alone.
Unsure.
Listening for any sign of what comes next.

But the hallway is where we grow.
It is where:

✨ Resilience is shaped
✨ Patience is stretched
✨ confidence is rebuilt
✨ purpose becomes clearer

It is the space where the soul learns what it truly wants.

“Between the ending and the beginning,
the becoming takes place.”

The bills still need paying.
The days still march on.
But even in the tightest seasons, one truth remains:

A closed door is not the conclusion —
it’s the transition.


📚 Part-Time Ghostwriting + Writing My Books: The Unexpected Blessing

In the quiet left by unanswered messages, something unexpected rose in its place.

A rhythm that did not drain.
A routine that did not suffocate.
A life that allowed breathing room.

Part-time ghostwriting offered simplicity, structure, and steadiness.
Writing my own books offered freedom, fire, and purpose.

Together, they formed a sanctuary —
a life aligned with my spirit, not against it.

It was a surprise blessing wearing the disguise of disappointment.


🔔 For You, Dear Reader

If you are standing before a door that did not open, hear me:

You have not failed.
You have not been overlooked.
You have not been cast aside.

You have been redirected.

Toward peace.
Toward purpose.
Toward a future that honors your heart.

Life removes you from places that are unworthy of your calling.

And when the right door opens — as surely it will —
You will see why the others had to close.


📝 Disclaimer

This blog reflects personal experiences and interpretations. It is intended for inspiration and reflection, not as professional employment advice.


👩‍💼 About the Author

A.L. Childers is a bestselling author, truth-seeker, and storyteller based in Charlotte, NC. She writes about resilience, reinvention, hidden history, and the quiet wisdom inside life’s turning points.

A powerful, Dickens-style reflection by author A.L. Childers on why closed doors are often divine protection—not rejection. Discover how life reroutes us toward purpose, peace, and unexpected blessings through ghostwriting, creativity, and trusting the process.

The Curriculum of Illusion: Why Our Schools Teach Narratives—Not History

By A.L. Childers, author of The Lies We Loved: How Advertising Invented America

If you listen closely, you’ll notice something strange about American history textbooks—they all seem to sound the same.

Smooth.
Sanitized.
Predictable.
Comfortably patriotic.

It’s almost as if they’ve all been… written for the same purpose.

Not to teach.

But to sell.

Sell a worldview.
Sell a myth.
Sell an identity packaged so neatly that students stop questioning where it came from.

And that’s where organizations like the National Council for History Education (NCHE) step in—well-meaning on the surface, but functioning inside a system that has been grooming narratives for over 150 years.

So let’s break it open.


⭐ ACT I: The History We’re Given vs. The History That Happened

The NCHE recently released a collection of “History’s Habits of Mind,” promoted as tools to help students “think historically.”

Sounds noble.
Sounds academic.
Sounds empowering.

But who decides which habits matter?
And which history gets elevated?

Even the language gives it away:

  • “Sharpen historical thinking.”
  • “Primary sources selected for discussion.”
  • “Aligned materials.”

Aligned with what?
Aligned with whom?
Aligned to preserve what narrative?

Because here’s the truth:

✔ Students aren’t learning history.

✔ They’re learning a curated version chosen for them.

✔ And uncomfortable truths rarely get included.

We are taught:

George Washington never told lies…
The Boston Tea Party was noble…
Thanksgiving was a peaceful dinner…
Christopher Columbus “discovered” a continent full of people…

Stories designed not to educate, but to reinforce patriotism and obedience.

Why?

Because real history destabilizes power.
Mythology reinforces it.


⭐ ACT II: The Business of History (Where the NCHE Fits In)

Let’s follow the money.

📌 Textbook companies (Pearson, McGraw Hill, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt)

Control 80%+ of all K-12 textbooks in the United States.

📌 State textbook committees

—particularly Texas and Florida—
have outsized control over what the entire nation reads.

A single objection from these committees can remove:

  • slavery’s brutality
  • labor union violence
  • government conspiracies
  • CIA interference
  • corporate propaganda
  • Indigenous genocide
  • economic oppression
  • political manipulation

And organizations like NCHE—though not inherently malicious—operate inside this system, curating lesson plans and materials that fit within the already-approved narratives.

✔ They cannot contradict state standards.

✔ They cannot contradict textbook publishers.

✔ They cannot contradict politically crafted curriculum frameworks.

The result?

A polished history.
A patriotic history.
A profitable history.

Not a truthful one.


⭐ ACT III: Why Real History Is Not Taught (The Part They Avoid)

Because truth is messy.
Truth is angry.
Truth threatens the social order.

If we taught:

  • that enslaved people resisted violently
  • that banks created the Great Depression
  • that corporations funded both sides of wars
  • that the CIA overthrew democracies globally
  • that America’s “freedoms” were often propaganda
  • that labor movements won rights—not politicians
  • that segregationists rewrote southern textbooks
  • that advertising created modern identity
  • that government agencies manipulated information

…then we would raise a generation that questions everything.

And institutions don’t want thinkers.

They want believers.

This is exactly why your book,
The Lies We Loved: How Advertising Invented America,
hits so hard: it exposes how narratives are manufactured the same way brands are.

History is marketed.
Identity is branded.
Truth is edited.


⭐ ACT IV: Real References (This is where the receipts come in)

📝 1. Teaching American History: The Struggle to Define the Past

— Gary Nash
Documents how political groups have shaped curriculums to fit ideology.

📝 2. Lies My Teacher Told Me

— James W. Loewen
One of the clearest breakdowns of textbook distortion and mythmaking.

📝 3. The Miseducation of America (NPR interviews with educators)

Confirms teachers are pressured to follow strict, sanitized frameworks.

📝 4. Reports from the Texas Board of Education (2002–2022)

Show documented political removal of content relating to racism, colonialism, and labor movements.

📝 5. The American Pageant (13th edition analysis)

Demonstrates pro-corporate, pro-war, nationalist framing in widely used textbooks.

📝 6. NCHE Program Materials

While valuable in method, they rely on pre-selected primary sources, already filtered through publisher-approved history.

In other words—
the “primary source” is only offered after someone decided it was safe.


⭐ ACT V: So What Do We Do About It?

We tell the truth.
We question the narrative.
We read outside the curriculum.
We stop worshiping textbooks as if they’re sacred.

And we write books like:

🔥 The Lies We Loved: How Advertising Invented America



Because the next generation does not need another myth.

They need honesty.

They need voices willing to question the sanitized version of America that has been sold to us like a brand slogan.


Why the history taught in American schools isn’t the real story. Explore how organizations like the NCHE fit into a larger system of curated narratives, political control, and sanitized textbooks. Includes references, resources, and analysis by A.L. Childers, author of The Lies We Loved.




⭐ DISCLAIMER

This blog is an educational analysis based on publicly available reports, historical scholarship, and documented curriculum policies. It does not claim NCHE acts with malicious intent, but examines the structural forces shaping historical education in the United States.

🌙 A Mother’s Lantern: 33 Life Lessons I Pray My Children Never Forget — A Story Told in Warm Light, Shadow, and Hard-Earned Wisdom —

33 Life Lessons I Pray My Children Never Forget
— A Story Told in Warm Light, Shadow, and Hard-Earned Wisdom —
By A.L. Childers


There are evenings — quiet, gold-edged, and still — when the world finally unclenches its jaw, and a mother can hear herself think. It is in these hours, between the settling of the house and the rising of the moon, when I often find myself holding an old lantern.

Not a real one.
But the kind you feel in your chest — the kind passed down from mothers who survived harder winters, deeper heartaches, and homes with thinner walls than mine. It’s a lantern made of memory: warm glass, iron frame, a flicker of the Divine inside.

I imagine myself walking ahead of my children on the winding road of life, lantern held high so they might see where the world grows crooked… and where it grows holy.

Tonight, I write to place that lantern in their hands.

And yours.

Because one day they will walk without me — and the world, with all its thunder and sweetness, will demand that they remember who they are.

So here are the lessons I pray they carry, like warm light in cold fog.


The 33 Lessons Lit by a Mother’s Lantern

1. Never shrink to fit inside someone else’s comfort.

The world grows small when you do.

2. Character is your true name.

Reputation is only the echo.

3. Think for yourself.

The crowd is usually loud… and usually wrong.

4. Question everything, even the things you want to believe.

5. Hold a clean conscience.

Integrity is a lantern that never lies to you.

6. You are valuable—act like it.

Walk away when staying becomes self-betrayal.

7. Respect the body that carries your soul.

8. You are enough.

There has never been another you, nor will there ever be.

9. If you can’t pay cash, you can’t afford it.

Debt is modern slavery.

10. Don’t chase joy in bottles, beds, or borrowed identities.

11. Life is short.

Make something of it that echoes.

12. Believe in impossible things — they’re the only ones that matter.

13. Dream boldly, then work quietly.

14. Kindness is never wasted.

15. You will fall.

Get up with your soul intact.

16. Forward is the only direction worth fighting for.

17. The world owes you nothing.

But you owe yourself everything.

18. Life is an adventure — step into it with courage.

19. Gratitude unlocks doors you didn’t know were locked.

20. Do not follow the herd — they wander off cliffs.

21. Guard your joy like a homeland.

22. Time is your most precious currency.

Don’t spend it like loose change.

23. Don’t “go with the flow.”

Be the river.

24. Listen more than you speak.

Wisdom hides in silence.

25. Tend gently to others.

Everyone carries private wars.

26. Speak to yourself like you would to someone you love.

27. When you marry, you marry the family too.

28. Treat every day as the fragile gift that it is.

29. Not everyone will like you.

Be grateful. It’s a filter.

30. Be humble. Be kind. Be steady.

31. Take no nonsense from anyone — especially bullies in grown-up bodies.

32. Guard your private life.

Mystery is a form of power.

33. Family troubles are to be mended at home, not displayed to wolves.


🌙 Closing the Lantern

And so, in my final whisper of the night, here is the truth I want them — and you — to remember:

Do good anyway.
Give anyway.
Rise anyway.
Because it was never between you and them.
It was always between you and God.

If my children remember even one of these lessons, then this mother’s lantern will have done its work.

And if you needed this too, then perhaps — in some small, tender way — the lantern has been passed to you.


🌿 About the Author — A.L. Childers

A.L. Childers is a bestselling author, blogger, and creator of TheHypothyroidismChick.com. A Southern-born storyteller with a lantern’s worth of lived wisdom, she writes about women’s health, neurodivergent motherhood, ancient remedies, magic, survival, and the quiet courage it takes to rebuild yourself.

Her works span genres — from health and wellness guides to ancestral magic cookbooks, to powerful memoir-style essays that help women reclaim their voice.

She is the author of:

Witchy & Ancestral Magic Books

  • The Witch’s Almanac Cookbook (2026 Edition)
  • Healing Stews & Enchanted Brews (Crockpot Edition)
  • Healing Stews & Enchanted Brews: Holiday Magic
  • My Grandmother’s Witchy Medicine Cabinet
  • Colors of the Coven
  • Whispers of the Familiar
  • Enchanting Reflections
  • The Beginner Witch’s Guide to Practical Witchcraft
  • The Heart of the Shamanic Witch Journal

Health, Hormones & Healing Books

  • Reset Your Thyroid
  • A Survivor’s Cookbook Guide to Kicking Hypothyroidism’s Booty
  • Hypothyroidism Beginner’s Guide
  • The Ultimate Guide to Healing Hypothyroidism

Her mission:
To help women heal — body, spirit, and lineage.

Find her at:
📌 TheHypothyroidismChick.com
📌 TikTok: @breakthematrixaudrey
📌 Instagram: @ThyroidismChick


⚠️ Disclaimer

This blog is for entertainment, inspiration, and educational purposes only.
It is not medical, financial, legal, or professional advice.

Always consult a licensed professional before making changes to your health, supplements, lifestyle, or medical treatment. The author assumes no responsibility for actions taken based on the information herein.

Knowledge is power — but wisdom is what you do with it.


💌 If this touched you, share it.

And if you’d like wisdom like this delivered straight to your inbox,
subscribe at TheHypothyroidismChick.com.

5 Natural Remedies for Vaginal Dryness, Odor & Hormonal Imbalance


Vaginal dryness, odor, itching, or hormonal imbalance are more common than women realize—especially with hypothyroidism, stress, or perimenopause. Here are five natural remedies that actually work.



Women whisper about their symptoms.
Doctors dismiss them.
Google scares them.
And society acts like anything involving a vagina should be either sexy or silent.

But here’s the truth:

Your vagina is not supposed to be dry, irritated, painful, or smelly.
And when it is — your BODY is talking to you.

Not shaming you.
Not betraying you.
TALKING to you.

Especially if you’re struggling with:

  • hypothyroidism
  • Hashimoto’s
  • hormone imbalance
  • perimenopause
  • high stress
  • birth control side effects
  • gut issues
  • poor detox

Your vagina is one of the first places symptoms show up.

So let’s talk about it with honesty, compassion, and real solutions.


🔥 WHY THIS HAPPENS (And Why It’s NOT Your Fault)

Most women who deal with dryness, odor, irritation, or discharge have at least one of these root causes:

✔ Low estrogen

This happens with:

  • thyroid issues
  • perimenopause
  • menopause
  • stress
  • undereating
  • too much cardio
  • birth control

Estrogen = lubrication.

Low estrogen = dryness + burning + painful sex.


✔ Gut imbalance

Your vagina and gut share bacteria.
So if your gut is inflamed → your vagina is too.

This causes:

  • odor
  • discharge
  • yeast infections
  • BV

✔ Hormonal imbalance

If your hormones aren’t communicating right, your vaginal pH goes wild.


✔ Thyroid dysfunction

YES — your thyroid controls:

  • vaginal tissue hydration
  • lubrication
  • elasticity
  • pH balance

Women with hypothyroidism experience dryness even in their 20s and 30s.


✔ Stress

Cortisol kills lubrication.
Fast.


**🔥 5 Natural Remedies That Actually WORK

(And are safe, gentle, and effective)**


✨ 1. The Aloe Vera Hydration Method

Aloe is one of the most powerful, gentle hydration tools for vaginal tissue.

Use:

  • 100% pure aloe gel (no alcohol, no fragrance)

Apply a small amount externally OR use a tiny amount internally with a clean finger.

Benefits:

  • restores moisture
  • reduces burning
  • calms irritation
  • helps pH balance

Women notice results in 2–4 days.


✨ 2. Probiotics — But NOT the Ones You Think

Most women think yogurt or random probiotics fix everything.
But vaginal balance requires specific strains:

Look for:

  • Lactobacillus rhamnosus
  • Lactobacillus reuteri

These strains rebuild vaginal flora.

They help with:

  • BV
  • odor
  • yeast
  • dryness from inflammation

Your gut and vagina are SISTERS.
Heal the gut → the vagina follows.


✨ 3. The Coconut Oil Barrier Trick

Coconut oil is antifungal, antibacterial, and soothing.

Use this:

  • as a lubricant
  • before showering
  • before sex
  • before swimming
  • at night for hydration

Perfect for:

  • dryness
  • inflammation
  • mild odor
  • tissue irritation
  • rubbing/chafing

Don’t use with latex condoms — oil breaks them down.


✨ 4. Castor Oil Warm Compress (YES, FOR REAL)

Castor oil increases:

  • pelvic circulation
  • lymphatic drainage
  • tissue elasticity
  • hormone flow

Instructions:

  1. Warm a tablespoon of castor oil (not hot).
  2. Massage gently across the lower pelvis.
  3. Place a warm towel over the area for 10 minutes.

This can:

  • increase lubrication
  • reduce pelvic tension
  • help hormonal dryness
  • calm vaginal inflammation

Castor oil is a miracle worker.


✨ 5. Fix the ROOT: Support Your Hormones & Thyroid

Read that again.

Dryness, odor, and irritation don’t come from “bad hygiene.”
They come from:

  • low estrogen
  • low thyroid
  • unhealthy gut
  • adrenal burnout
  • liver overload
  • stress

Women with thyroid issues MUST support hormones.

Start with:

  • eating within an hour of waking
  • magnesium glycinate
  • vitamin B6
  • zinc
  • fermented foods
  • fixing sleep
  • cutting caffeine before breakfast
  • liver support (lemons, greens, broth, ginger)
  • hydration

Your vagina is a hormone barometer.

Balance hormones → everything improves.


🔥 WHEN TO SEE A DOCTOR (For Safety)

See a provider if you have:

  • sharp pelvic pain
  • fever
  • post-menopause bleeding
  • foul odor with severe itching
  • pain with urination
  • bleeding after sex
  • persistent pain

Your health matters.
You deserve answers — not judgment.


✨ Books That Help With Hormones, Thyroid & Women’s Health

Everything I write is FOR WOMEN.
Your body, your hormones, your healing.

Hashimoto’s Crock-Pot Recipes

 Reset Your Thyroid: 21-Day Meal Plan

A Women’s Holistic Holy Grail Handbook for Hypothyroidism

Fresh & Fabulous Hypothyroidism Body Balance

The Lies We Loved : How Advertising Invented America

The Hidden Empire

Nightmare Legends
The Girl the Darkness Raised: A Memoir of Scarcity, Survival, and Becoming

The Witch’s Almanac Cookbook (2026)

Whispers in the Wires

These books change lives because they changed mine.


✨ Disclaimer

This blog is for educational and informational purposes only and not medical advice. Always consult a healthcare professional for diagnosis and treatment.


✨ About the Author — A.L. Childers

A bestselling author and women’s health writer, A.L. Childers blends research, storytelling, and lived experience to help women heal their hormones, thyroid, and bodies naturally. Her work reaches thousands of women across the world through her books and her blog at TheHypothyroidismChick.com.


Your Period Is Trying to Tell You Something

(Especially If You’re Hypothyroid)
By A.L. Childers


If your period has changed, worsened, become painful, irregular, heavy, or unpredictable, your thyroid may be sending you warnings. Learn the signs, root causes, and how to restore hormonal balance naturally.



Your period is not just a period.

It’s a report card from your body.

Women are raised to believe their period is just an inconvenience.
Something to hide.
Something to push through.
Something to medicate, silence, or shame.

But your menstrual cycle is your fifth vital sign.
Just as important as pulse, temperature, or blood pressure.

And when your thyroid is struggling?
Your period is the first thing to warn you.

Your period is trying to tell you something.


🔥 What Your Period Says About Your Thyroid

Most women don’t realize this, but your thyroid controls:

  • ovulation
  • progesterone production
  • estrogen clearance
  • PMS intensity
  • clotting
  • cramping
  • cycle length
  • breast tenderness
  • mood swings

So when your thyroid slows down… so does EVERYTHING.

Here’s what your period might be saying:


🔥 1. “Your thyroid is low.” — Heavy or Clotty Periods

If your period feels like:

  • flooding
  • clotting
  • changing pads hourly
  • losing large amounts of blood

That’s a classic sign of:
low thyroid + low progesterone + high estrogen.

Your body is not supposed to bleed like that.


🔥 2. “Your ovulation is off.” — Long Cycles (35–60 days)

Hypothyroidism can delay ovulation.
Delayed ovulation = delayed period.

It’s not irregular.
It’s slow.

Just like everything else in hypothyroidism.


🔥 3. “Your stress hormones are too high.” — Short Cycles (21–25 days)

This is adrenal burnout mixed with thyroid dysfunction.

Your body is saying:
“I don’t feel safe to carry a pregnancy, so I’m cycling faster.”

Women with thyroid issues see this constantly.


🔥 4. “Your hormones are imbalanced.” — Missing Periods

Amenorrhea is not just:

  • stress
  • age
  • randomness

It’s often:

  • low thyroid
  • low progesterone
  • high cortisol
  • nutrient deficiencies
  • long-term inflammation

Your body is conserving energy.


🔥 5. “Your liver is overwhelmed.” — Bad PMS

Your liver clears used hormones.
If it’s slacking?

You will feel EVERYTHING:

  • rage
  • crying spells
  • breast pain
  • water retention
  • bloating
  • insomnia
  • migraines
  • cravings

Sound familiar?


🔥 6. “Your body needs support.” — Extreme Fatigue Before or During Period

Women with thyroid issues crash HARD the week before their cycle.

Your body is doing double work:

  • hormonal shifts
  • low thyroid function

This leaves you tired, foggy, and heavy.


🔥 So How Do You Support Your Period (and Thyroid)?

Here are the 6 proven steps that work FAST:


✨ 1. Eat More REAL Carbs

Your hormones NEED:

  • sweet potatoes
  • berries
  • apples
  • carrots
  • oatmeal
  • lentils

Low-carb diets RUIN women’s hormones.


✨ 2. Fix Your Magnesium Levels

If your period is painful → you’re magnesium deficient.

Try:

  • magnesium glycinate
  • magnesium spray
  • Epsom salt baths

✨ 3. Support Liver Detox

Your liver clears estrogen.

Do this:

  • lemon water
  • fermented foods
  • reduce dairy
  • eat cruciferous veggies (COOKED)
  • drink more water

✨ 4. Increase Progesterone Naturally

Progesterone is the calm, soothing, stabilizing hormone.

Boost it with:

  • vitamin B6
  • zinc
  • healthy fats
  • lowering cortisol
  • eating before caffeine

✨ 5. Reduce Stress (your hormones FEEL everything)

Try:

  • walking after meals
  • grounding
  • deep breathing
  • journaling
  • choosing peace on purpose

✨ 6. Fix Your Thyroid Numbers

Your period won’t regulate until your thyroid does.

Look at:

  • TSH
  • Free T3
  • Free T4
  • Reverse T3
  • TPO antibodies

Your hormone healing starts with thyroid healing.


✨ Want More Women’s Hormone Support?

It’s why I write the books I write — to help women FIX their bodies, not fight them.

Reset Your Thyroid: 21-Day Meal Plan

Hashimoto’s Crock-Pot Recipes

A Women’s Holistic Holy Grail Handbook for Hypothyroidism

Fresh & Fabulous Hypothyroidism Body Balance

Everything I create is for women like you — women who deserve answers.


✨ Disclaimer

This article is for educational purposes only and not medical advice. Always discuss health decisions with your provider.


✨ About the Author — A.L. Childers

A bestselling author, researcher, and women’s health advocate. After years of autoimmune illness, trauma, and misdiagnosis, she healed naturally—and now dedicates her life to helping other women reclaim their health, hormones, and power.