For most of my life, I thought survival was about keeping my head down and following the rules. I thought if I obeyed the unspoken codes of politeness, endurance, and modest ambition, life would reward me. But then came the days when the rules didn’t work. When life hit so hard that survival meant rewriting the entire playbook.
I don’t say this lightly: Some rules deserve to be broken. Not because rebellion felt good, but because obedience was slowly killing me.
“Sometimes, you survive by lighting the match and walking away from what no longer deserves you.”
— Mark Craycraft, Thoughts and Prayers (2024)
I’ve seen firsthand what happens when people cling too tightly to rules written by those who’ve never had to endure the fire. I’ve lived through the kind of family dysfunction that hides behind polite smiles. I’ve heard the venom of words hurled in rooms that were supposed to be safe. I’ve seen how untreated addiction, when coddled by secrecy and shame, passes from one generation to the next like an heirloom. I’ve fought tooth and nail for my own mental health, through years when even getting out of bed felt like a radical act of destiny defiance.
Those moments—the ones we’re not proud to tell at family dinners—are often the ones that made us. When I left jobs, relationships, systems that no longer respected my dignity, I wasn’t abandoning my path. I was carving it.
We are taught to be agreeable. But there is power in learning when to be disagreeable—in service of your well-being. Especially for those of us who have faced trauma, grief, illness, or felt invisible in our own story, obedience can feel like a requirement. But healing often demands disruption.
“To walk away isn’t weakness. It’s wisdom dressed in work boots.”
— Mark Craycraft, Thoughts and Prayers (2024)
Years of struggling through mental and physical decline taught me that you can’t fight for yourself by following someone else’s map. At some point, you have to throw away the script and write your own lines.
If I don’t speak up for my worth, the world fills the silence with its own assumptions. I learned that silence is not always golden. Sometimes, it’s just quiet compliance.
“Your silence will never be loud enough to command respect.”
— Mark Craycraft, Thoughts and Prayers (2024)
Breaking the rules didn’t make me reckless. It made me whole. I gave myself permission to mourn, to scream, to rest, to write, to try again. Each act a rebellion, but also a resurrection.
“Legacy is defined as: Anything handed down from the past. Break the chain if the past was pain.”
— Mark Craycraft, 40/40 Vision (2009)
This is for anyone who has been told, “just hang in there.” Sometimes you don’t need to hang on. You need to let go, regroup, and rebuild. What society calls quitting might be the most courageous thing you ever do.
You were not born to be agreeable. You were born to be alive. Fully, deeply, authentically alive.
So, break the rules when you must. Build your life on something stronger than expectation: build it on your truth.