Skip to main content
Day.News — Local News. Real Community.
247 neighbors reading now

Boynton Beach Day News

Sun, Sand, and a Whole Lot More!Boynton Beach, FL Edition

Columnists

Friday, June 5, 2026 · Boynton Beach

The Affirmation Trap: Why "I Am Enough" Might Be Gaslighting You

Turns out, telling yourself you're enough when you're falling apart doesn't fix anything—and that's actually okay.

Friday, June 5, 2026
Read Story

Why We Keep Misreading Emily Dickinson—And Why It Matters

Her dashes aren't random pauses. They're a revolution. Here's what your high school teacher never told you about how to actually read her work.

Friday, June 5, 2026

The Paradox of Forgetting: Why Hemingway Was Right to Write Badly First

Ernest Hemingway's famous advice to "write hard and clear about what hurts" only works if you're willing to produce garbage first—and most writers skip this essential step.

Friday, June 5, 2026

The Fed Just Admitted It's Been Wrong All Year—And Nobody's Acting Like It

Jerome Powell conceded yesterday that inflation stays stickier than his team predicted. Here's what that confession means for your mortgage, your job, and the rate cuts you thought were coming.

Friday, June 5, 2026

The Museum Audio Guide Is Dead, and Good Riddance to Boring

Those headsets you rent at the entrance? They're turning art appreciation into a theme park. We need to talk about why the best museums are finally ditching them.

Friday, June 5, 2026

Mercury's Midweek Mischief: When the Cosmos Plays Telephone

The messenger planet is doing laps around your communication sector, and honey, your texts are about to get *weird*. Plus: one sign is cosmic public enemy number one today.

Friday, June 5, 2026

People Are Fixing Things Again, and It's Weirder Than You'd Think

Repair shops can't keep up with demand. Turns out humans prefer owning stuff that works to buying new stuff that doesn't. This is not a feel-good story about virtue—it's about economics and spite.

Friday, June 5, 2026

Skip the State Capital—Head to the County Seat Instead

There's a tier of American town most road-trippers skip entirely: the county seat that's too big to be quaint, too small to be a destination. That's exactly why you should go there this weekend.

Friday, June 5, 2026

Cast Iron's Ugly Secret: Why Your Pan Might Be Lying to You

That seasoning you've been building up for three years? It might be more rust than nonstick. Here's what actually works, and why I'm throwing away half my collection.

Friday, June 5, 2026

How to Cut Hand-Sawn Dovetails Without Losing Your Mind (or Your Fingers)

Dovetails look impossible until you realize they're just two simple cuts repeated. Here's how to nail them on your first try—and what mistake will sabotage you before you even pick up the saw.

Friday, June 5, 2026

The Farmer's Carry Will Fix Your Posture Better Than Thinking About Your Posture

Stop doing shoulder rolls. Pick up something heavy and walk. Here's why this brutally simple exercise is more effective than your entire ergonomic setup.

Friday, June 5, 2026

The Vinyl Renaissance is Peak Aesthetic Nostalgia and I'm Over It (But Also Going to the Record Store This Weekend)

Everyone suddenly owns a turntable they don't know how to use, and somehow we've convinced ourselves spinning a record is a personality trait.

Friday, June 5, 2026

The "Delulu Is the Solulu" Era Is Over, and Nobody Told the Girlies

Toxic positivity's favorite catchphrase has metastasized into something genuinely concerning — a cultural permission slip to ignore reality entirely, and it's time we admit the joke landed too hard.

Friday, June 5, 2026

My Husband Took a Job in Another State—Without Telling Me First

She found out her spouse accepted a position three states away from a LinkedIn notification. Now he's confused why she's furious.

Friday, June 5, 2026

The Brutalism Renaissance Is Getting Out of Hand and I'm Here for It

Why are we suddenly obsessed with massive concrete boxes, and why does my apartment now look like a 1960s Soviet ministry building?

Friday, June 5, 2026

The Brutalist Deserves Better Than Your Three-Hour Attention Span

Brady Corbet's "The Brutalist" is a masterpiece that everyone's pretending to love while secretly checking their phones. Here's why that matters.

Friday, June 5, 2026

I Quit My Job to "Find Myself" and Now I'm Just Finding My Parents' Disappointment

A reader walked away from a stable paycheck to figure out their life. Three months in, the panic is setting in—and it's not about money.

Friday, June 5, 2026

I Make Good Money. So Why Am I Broke? (And Why That's Actually Fixable)

A reader earning six figures is living paycheck-to-paycheck. His problem isn't income—it's that he never learned to say no. Here's how to stop.

Friday, June 5, 2026

Your Gym Selfies Are Hurting Your Gains (And Your Relationship)

A reader's caught between wanting to document his fitness progress and keeping his girlfriend from feeling ignored. The answer isn't what either of them thinks it is.

Friday, June 5, 2026

My Kid's School Wants Me to Ban Books. I Don't Believe in Banning, But One Actually Bothers Me.

A parent caught between her principles and her gut reaction discovers that consistency—even when it's uncomfortable—might be the only honest position available.

Friday, June 5, 2026

I Panic-Bought Real Estate and Now I'm Panicking: What to Do When FOMO Costs $400K

A reader overpaid for a rental property during the market frenzy and now regrets everything. Here's the uncomfortable truth about fixing it.

Friday, June 5, 2026

My Kid's Teacher Wants Me to "Partner" on Homework—But I Work Two Jobs

A frustrated parent questions whether she's failing her child by not sitting down every night to oversee assignments. Mama Mae has thoughts.

Friday, June 5, 2026

The Silent Treatment Isn't Communication—It's Just Silence With Feelings

She won't tell him what's wrong, he's exhausted from guessing, and their marriage is suffocating in unspoken resentment. Here's what's actually happening.

Friday, June 5, 2026

The Fed Just Admitted It's Flying Blind—And Markets Know It

Jerome Powell's latest pivot reveals the central bank has abandoned its playbook. That should terrify anyone holding bonds, but the real danger is what comes next.

Friday, June 5, 2026

The Dangerous Comfort of Certainty—Why the Smartest People Often Ask the Most Questions

We celebrate decisive leaders and confident experts, but history's most brilliant minds spent their lives admitting what they didn't know. Here's why doubt might be your actual superpower.

Friday, June 5, 2026

Why Haiku Breaks Your Brain in the Best Way (And Why You Should Write One Today)

The seventeen-syllable poem isn't a tiny thing you write in a hurry—it's a precision instrument that forces you to see the world like a camera lens. Here's why poets have been obsessed with it for 400 years.

Friday, June 5, 2026

The Affirmation Nobody Tells You About: Why "I Don't Know Yet" Is More Powerful Than "I Can Do Anything

We've been sold the wrong affirmation. Here's why admitting what you don't know might be the most honest—and most empowering—thing you can say today.

Friday, June 5, 2026

Mercury's Trickster Tuesday: Watch Your Words (And Your WiFi)

The planet of communication is doing its best impression of a malfunctioning GPS, and one sign is about to learn why "reply all" exists as a cautionary tale.

Friday, June 5, 2026

The Dog Park Revolution Nobody Asked For (But Everyone Needed)

A retired engineer spent two years fighting city bureaucracy to build a dog park with actual drainage. Here's what that obsession taught us about getting things done.

Friday, June 5, 2026

The Ichetucknee Gamble: Why Florida's Most Beautiful Spring Run Gets Crowded—and How to Actually Enjoy It

Crystal-clear water, lazy current, and 100 other paddlers in tubes. Here's what most people miss about Florida's most Instagram-famous spring run—and why you should go anyway.

Friday, June 5, 2026