Flex — And Cop

To flex is to stretch — your status, your style, your confidence. It’s the loud sneakers, the carefully casual post, the subtle (or not-so-subtle) victory lap. Flexing says, Look at what I have. Look at what I’ve done. It’s the peacock strut of human nature, and in small doses, it builds self-assurance. But overdone, it becomes a fragile castle built on likes and envy.

And sometimes, the biggest flex of all is having the courage to simply say, “My bad. I’ve got this.” flex and cop

To cop , on the other hand, is to own — to admit, to accept, to face the music. Copping means saying, I made a mistake. Or Yes, that was me. Or I’ll take the hit. It’s the quiet strength after the loud mistake, the accountability that follows the boast. Where flexing reaches for applause, copping reaches for integrity. To flex is to stretch — your status,

Flex and Cop

In the theater of modern life, two opposing forces constantly collide: the urge to flex and the need to cop . Look at what I’ve done