Phoenix Diaries: The Chapter Where My Friends Pulled Me From the Ashes
The real reason I survived this year? My friends. The ones who called, cried, laughed, and carried me when I couldn’t carry myself.
Phoenix Diaries
Personal stories of transformation, heartbreak, and rebuilding from ground zero.
There's a version of me that wouldn't have made it through this year, not without my friends.
Not without the 8-year-old who grew up beside me and still checks in on my spirit. Not without the women I met in my 30s and 40s, who became my chosen family, not through obligation, but through showing the hell up.
I was recently listening to Simon Sinek on Diary of a CEO, you know, the bestselling author and leadership thinker who talks about purpose like it's oxygen, and he said something that stopped me:
Friendship is one of the greatest biohacks we have, more powerful than leadership books or ridiculous morning routines that start at 5 am. And I felt that in my bones.
Because when my marriage ended… When I didn't have a home and had been living out of a suitcase for the past 10 months… When I used my savings just to stay afloat…
It wasn't a strategy or a productivity hack that kept me going. It was a voice note. A video call. A "you've got this" from someone who knew how to say it like they meant it.
Friendship is not a luxury. It is an emotional infrastructure.
And it's one of the only things that has felt real in a year where so much fell apart.
We live in a world that has made it harder to make and keep friends. We move cities. We swipe instead of talk. We chase timelines that rarely leave space for connection. And yet, some of my deepest, most soul-anchoring friendships were built not despite adulthood but because of it.
Because when the foundation cracks, you learn really fast who can sit in the rubble with you.
I have friends who have cried with me over the phone, laughed with me on WhatsApp, screamed with me in late-night voice notes, and sent me tea-spitting memes when I needed to remember what joy and laughter tasted like.
We've talked about nothing and everything: grief, betrayal, mortgages, orgasms, therapy, exes, stretch marks, wins, astrology, menopause, and whether that text actually meant what we think it meant.
And when we get together in real life? That bond gets poured into concrete.
We carry each other. We cheer for each other. And when one of us can't give 100%? The other steps in, no questions asked. It's not 50/50. It's not perfect. But it's mutual. And it matters.
Simon said something else that struck me: Most of us are better at finding people who'll hold our pain than people who'll hold our joy.
That hit.
Because these women, these radiant, brave, hilarious, wildly wise women, they don't just hold me when I cry. They celebrate me when I shine.
And that's just as important.
In a world that keeps us isolated and distracted, friendship is a radical act of remembering.
It's the deep knowing that you are not meant to survive this life or rebuild it alone.
To my friends (you know who you are), thank you. I love you. I wouldn’t have made it through this chapter without you.
So here's your invitation:
Before you close this post, text someone. Call someone. Send a voice note that simply says:
"I love you. I'm glad you're here. Thank you."
Not because it's urgent. But because it's everything.
xo,
Tanya



So glad you had a community to lift you up! And honored to be a part of it! Thank you for this lesson. I think one of the biggest things I've learned as an adult, is that if you want meaningful friendships you have to reach out—so I love the way you ended this: Before you close this post, text someone. Call someone. Send a voice note that simply says:
"I love you. I'm glad you're here. Thank you."
Not because it's urgent. But because it's everything.
Agreed & will do!