The Pink Writer
The CEO in Saddle Shoes
The Pink Writer: The CEO in Saddle Shoes
A vignette from the girl who refused the script
“It’s strange to grow up in a world that told girls to shrink,
only to arrive in 2026 and feel the old scripts trying to return
as if the time machine malfunctioned and dropped pieces of the 1800s into the present.”
That’s not politics.
That’s lived experience.

The Pink Writer: The CEO in Saddle Shoes
A vignette from the girl who refused the script
She was eight years old, maybe nine
old enough to know the smell of hot starch,
too young to understand why everyone kept insisting
that this was her future.
The ironing board stood like a warning sign in the hallway.
A domestic altar.
A training ground.
A prophecy she never agreed to.
In her world, girls were not raised
they were prepared.
Prepared to clean.
Prepared to serve.
Prepared to fold themselves into the shape of someone else’s life.
It was the 1950s, and the air itself carried instructions.
Good girls don’t question.
Good girls don’t delegate.
Good girls don’t dream beyond the kitchen window.
But this girl this tiny, sharp eyed, pink souled creature
looked at the iron, looked at her allowance,
looked at her friend who liked ironing,
and decided to hire her friend to iron.
A clean, brilliant, sovereign decision.
“I’ll pay you half if you do it.”
Just like that.

A contract.
A partnership.
A redistribution of resources.
A micro economy built on fairness and instinct.
She wasn’t lazy.
She was efficient.
She was strategic.
She was a CEO in saddle shoes.
But the adults didn’t see brilliance.
They saw disobedience.
They saw a girl stepping out of her assigned lane.
They saw a threat to the order they had been taught to protect.
And so came the discipline
the punishment meant to crush the spark,
to teach her that delegation was defiance,
that leadership was disrespect,
that a girl with ideas was a girl who needed correcting.
But here’s the truth the adults never understood:
She wasn’t refusing the chore.
She was refusing the destiny.

She was refusing the idea that her life would be measured
in pressed collars and folded linens.
She was refusing the script that said
women exist to serve, not to innovate.
She was refusing the cage
before she even knew it was a cage.
The Time Machine That Malfunctioned
And now it is 2026.
A year that feels like someone shook the timeline
and dropped pieces of the 1800s into the present.
Not politically.
Not ideologically.
But structurally
the same old patterns wearing new clothes.
Women still being told to shrink.
Women still being punished for delegating.
Women still being questioned when they lead.
Women still being asked to justify their brilliance.
It’s not a political story.
It’s a human story.
A pattern story.

A cultural muscle memory that refuses to die quietly.
But here’s the part that matters:
Women are not who we were in the 1950s.
We are not who we were in the 1800s.
We are not who they expected us to remain.
We are creators.
We are strategists.
We are architects of possibility.
We are workers of pathways.
We are the ones who see the system and redesign it.
And the little girl who hired her friend to iron?
She was the prototype.
The early model.
The first spark of a lineage of women
who refuse to be domesticated into silence.
“It’s strange to grow up in a world that told girls to shrink,
only to arrive in 2026 and feel the old scripts trying to return
as if the time machine malfunctioned and dropped pieces of the 1800s into the present.”
That’s not politics.
That’s lived experience.
2026 Echoes
Old scripts resurfacing.
Familiar patterns returning in new costumes.
Women still navigating expectations that never belonged to them in the first place.
But this isn’t a political story.
It’s a human story.
A story about dignity, possibility, and the right to live a life shaped by one’s own purpose.
The Sovereign Statement
Women have always been brilliant.
The world simply wasn’t prepared to recognize it.
But readiness is no longer the measure.
Women are stepping into their lives without waiting for permission,
without shrinking to fit outdated roles,
without apologizing for their intelligence, creativity, or ambition.
This isn’t about sides.
It isn’t about parties.
It isn’t about ideology.
It’s about humanity.

It’s about whether people are allowed to live freely,
to create,
to contribute,
to dream,
to prosper
not just a few, but all.
It’s about whether we build a world where every person,
regardless of gender,
can rise without being told who they’re supposed to be.
And that is not a political value.
That is a human value.
“It’s strange to grow up in a world that told girls to shrink,
only to arrive in 2026 and feel the old scripts trying to return
as if the time machine malfunctioned and dropped pieces of the 1800s into the present.”
That’s not politics.
That’s lived experience.
This is hauntingly sharp. The repetition of "That’s not politics. That’s lived experience" acts like a rhythmic bassline it grounds the high-concept "malfunctioning time machine" in the undeniable weight of reality.

written, created, edited by
Vicki Lawana Trusselli
Trusselli Art
Outstages Cafe Art Studio
California
copyright 2026
About the Creator
Vicki Lawana Trusselli
Welcome to My Portal
I am a storyteller. This is where memory meets mysticism, music, multi-media, video, paranormal, rebellion, art, and life.
I nursing, business, & journalism in college. I worked in the film & music industry in LA, CA.



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