Friday, October 17, 2025

Operation Thaw


Operation Thaw 🧊


Every era produces its own survival literature. Some generations got Duck and Cover. Others got The Worst-Case Scenario Handbook. Ours, apparently, gets The Microwave's Guide to Operation Thaw. 

Yes, it's a real book. 

And yes, it's as ridiculous, serious, and necessary as it sounds. 

Operation Thaw began as a joke about staying calm in a cold political climate, but like most jokes worth keeping, it grew in satirical gravitas. It's a manual for being calm when everything around you feels engineered for reaction. It's humor as insulation, practicality disguised as parody, and a reminder that even in strange times, there are still good neighbors, working appliances, and small reasons to laugh. 

The book is currently in production and scheduled for publication in Spring 2026. Between now and then, I'll be sharing a few chapter excerpts here, exclusively for HTTF Readers. Think of them as field notes from a slightly absurd feature that looks suspiciously like our own. It's the kind of writing that helps you breathe a little easier when the headlines are shouting. It's also helpful for framing what's happening in society for younger audiences. It's written in satire because, well, serious topics don't have to be presented in a serious tone to be understood. 

Each excerpt stands alone, but together these 100 essays will form a quiet resistance: presence, patience, and humor as the tools of survival. 

Stay tuned, stay calm, and keep the kitchen warm. 

The great thaw is underway. 



Operation Thaw
(the book)... coming soon!


1. Field Manuals for the Domestically Overqualified 

(Because civilization often depends on whoever remembers to defrost the fridge.)
  1. The Microwave’s Guide to Operation Thaw

  2. The Parent’s Field Manual for Post-Freeze Conditions

  3. Operation Thaw: A Household Strategy for Emotional Climate Change

  4. Operation Thaw: Surviving Cold Politics with Warm Dinners

  5. The Family Preparedness Guide to Sudden Warm Fronts

  6. Defrosting 101: How to Stay Human Under Deep Freeze

  7. Operation Thaw for Beginners: How to Unstick a Nation

  8. The Domestic Front Survival Handbook

  9. Warm Hands, Cool Heads: The Modern Family’s Guide to Operation Thaw

  10. The Countertop Manifesto


2. Philosophical Heat Sources for Cold Mornings 

(Essays for those who overthink while waiting for the kettle to boil.)
  1. Operation Thaw: Essays on Staying Warm in Cold Times

  2. Notes from the Quiet Season

  3. A Manual for Gentle Rebellion

  4. The Slow Heat Protocol

  5. Operation Thaw: Dispatches from the Edge of Winter

  6. The Study of Melt

  7. A Field Guide to Softness

  8. The Ethics of Warmth

  9. Post-Frost Philosophy

  10. The Patience Experiments


3. Declassified Humor from the Ministry of Mild Panic

(Government-issued satire for unofficial citizens.)
  1. Department of Internal Warmth: Operation Thaw

  2. The Ministry of Mild Temperatures

  3. Manual 47-B: Human Conduct in Sub-Zero Conditions

  4. Civilian Warmth Program (Rev. 2025)

  5. Psychological Reheating Procedures, Volume I

  6. Operation Thaw: A Classified Experiment in Hope Management

  7. Field Report on the Gradual Softening of Civilians

  8. Homeland Defrost Directive

  9. Thermal Stability Initiative

  10. Operation Thaw: Interim Report to the Committee on Emotional Infrastructure


4. Emotional Physics for Everyday Use

(Blueprints for keeping democracy from freezing solid.)
  1. Operation Thaw: Notes for a Thawed Republic

  2. When Democracies Freeze

  3. How to Warm a Country Without Burning It

  4. The Quiet Countermeasure

  5. Civic Heat Exchange

  6. Operation Thaw: Lessons in Staying Kind Under Surveillance

  7. Defrosting Democracy

  8. Cold Power, Warm People

  9. The Great Unfreezing

  10. Operation Thaw: Field Notes on Endurance


5. Emotional Physics for Everyday Use

(Where psychology meets thermodynamics in a slightly burnt saucepan.)
  1. Operation Thaw: A Guide to Emotional Temperature Control

  2. The Science of Staying Soft

  3. Reheating the Human Spirit

  4. How to Melt Without Losing Form

  5. The Warm Mind Protocol

  6. Operation Thaw: Coping Mechanisms for Cold Times

  7. The Quiet Practice of Presence

  8. De-Icing the Soul

  9. Thermal Regulation for the Modern Psyche

  10. Small Fires Everywhere (Manual Edition)


6. Meteorology for the Human Condition

(A practical guide to the storms inside and the systems outside.)
  1. Operation Thaw: Weathering the Emotional Seasons

  2. Permafrost Protocols

  3. The Receding Ice Age: A Human Survival Story

  4. Meltwater Journals

  5. How to Bloom in a Blizzard

  6. The Great Thaw of Ordinary People

  7. Climate of the Heart

  8. Operation Thaw: Field Notes from the Emotional Equator

  9. Thaw Season

  10. Icebreakers and Other Necessary Skills


7. Cultural Survival Kits for the Slightly Alarmed

(How to stay warm while the zeitgeist loses power.)
  1. Operation Thaw: The Everyday Apocalypse Handbook

  2. How to Survive a Cold War Reboot

  3. The Mild Dissent Survival Manual

  4. The Geeks’ Guide to Reheating Civilization

  5. Operation Thaw: Practical Tips for the Spiritually Frostbitten

  6. The Suburban Resistance Cookbook

  7. Operation Thaw: Apocalypse, But Make It Cozy

  8. Keeping Warm During the End Times

  9. How to Stay Toasty While Empires Collapse

  10. Domestic Survival in Low-Temperature Regimes


8. Neighborhood Tactics for the Continuation of Civilization

(Because saving the world usually starts with a borrowed cup of sugar.)
  1. Operation Thaw: How to Keep the Table Warm

  2. A Neighborhood Plan for Staying Kind

  3. The Community Reheat Project

  4. Operation Thaw: Local Instructions for Global Chill

  5. The Fellowship of Warm Hands

  6. Keeping Each Other Warm

  7. How to Host a Civilization

  8. Small Town Heat Exchange

  9. The Circle That Didn’t Freeze

  10. Operation Thaw: A Community User’s Guide


9. Manuals for the Care and Feeding of Inner Fire

(Spiritual maintenance in low-oxygen environments.)
  1. Operation Thaw: Meditation for the End of Ice

  2. The Still Heat Within

  3. Notes from the Inner Hearth

  4. Operation Thaw: Practices for Soft Strength

  5. The House of Gentle Fires

  6. Thaw: A Prayer for the Living

  7. Inner Weather Patterns

  8. Operation Thaw: Instructions for a Tender Revolution

  9. When the Soul Hibernates

  10. Firekeepers


10. Meta-Maintenance and Other Quiet Emergencies

(For readers who suspect the manual is self-aware — and correct.)

  1. Operation Thaw (This Is Not a Drill)

  2. How to Unfreeze Your Friends and Influence People

  3. The Unofficial Domestic Rebellion Handbook

  4. Operation Thaw: An Accidental Masterclass in Staying Human

  5. A Brief Manual on Not Freaking Out

  6. Civilian Warmth for the Mildly Alarmed

  7. Operation Thaw: A Study in Moderate Panic

  8. The Unauthorized Guide to Keeping It Together

  9. Operation Thaw: A Human Maintenance Report

  10. How to Be Room Temperature


Learning How to Be Silly (Again)



Children laugh - on average - 300 times a day. Adults, about 17. Somewhere between homework and quarterly reports, we traded in our giggles for gravitas. We call it professionalism, maturity, or leadership. There's even an unspoken rule on LinkedIn (which is quickly evolving) that the only posts worthy of sharing are career changes, company milestones, or trending videos masquerading as leadership insights, with the ever-so annoying (but not so obvious) pat on the proverbial back. But statistically, laughing and letting one's hair down is in decline among adults: a measurable loss of spontaneous joy. 

For most of my early life, I lived in the serious camp. I started college at fifteen, built/sold a company before I was 21, and learned early that intellect was kind of social currency. That was culturally heightened for me living in Sweden when I was out walking my half-wolf half-Siberian dog (Tryggve) only to feel like socializing was a game of jeopardy I hadn't studied for. But everywhere we look, the faster we think, the fewer mistakes we make; the fewer mistakes, the more doors open. Seriousness became the core operating system by which 20-something me operated. It worked - until it didn't. 

Because when you lead long enough you start to see what humorless systems produce: tension, hierarchy, brittle logic, and people too afraid to innovate (or speak up). Just like how schools "kill creativity" - so too do corporate environments, stifling both humor and innovation in the process. By the time I hit my early 30s, I started to recognize that efficiency without levity breeds fear. And fear doesn't build anything worth inheriting. 

Mind you I've lived with levity - legally - since 2011, when I officially changed my last name to Laughing. The epiphany I had was that life was too short to be so serious and that doing seriously good work didn't require a serious mindset. On the contrary. Coming up with novel solutions to complex challenges requires out of the box thinking, or thinking about what you can do with the box you've been given. Both apply. 


Since this time I have delivered some seriously complex projects across the globe. I paused blogging here in HTTF to meet the demands of a career that took me to over twenty countries, that required I pack (sometimes with less than 24 hours notice) and drag my family across the globe, regardless of prior plans. I'm not complaining. It was the nature of the role, serving as global CEO. But the more serious I presented myself on LinkedIn, in meetings, and in research communities, the less silly or joyful I became. I stopped writing for fun. I stopped doodling my Stick Figures, and I stopped laughing. Imagine, Sophy Laughing not laughing. 

So, lately I've been unlearning the overcorrection. I'm learning how to be silly again. Not the forced kind that comes with corporate "team building" (I never liked that), but genuine absurdity: where laughter isn't permissioned and curiosity isn't edited for optics. Granted, I no longer serve as Chief Executive Officer of Cobeal, but I remain on the legal advisory board and have a vested interest in the company's success. I just can't sign off on the whole "boring as melba toast" marketing strategy that most corporate partners want to portray. In fact, the people who have made Cobeal successful are the same people who don't compress complex challenges into canned responses. They are the people who dare to experiment, who are resourceful and inventive, and who don't stop noodling on a client's issue long after the project has been delivered. These are the kind of people I like working with because innovative thinking is what we need to propel our world forward. Pretending smart people are a bunch of stiff shirts doesn't do anyone any good, and it certainly doesn't help those smart people solve complex problems for clients - who have enough on their plate. They need solid partners to come to the table with a relaxed open mind, ready to be part of the solution, rather than adding more stress and conflict. And you can't come to the table openminded unless you lighten up a bit. 

But this isn't as easy as it sounds. In fact, it's an advanced practice. Reclaiming silliness requires intelligence, restraint, and courage. It means dismantling the mental structures that insist everything must have a deliverable. It means remembering that play is not the opposite of productivity: it's often the engine behind it. 

When I watch groups like Portland's Secret Roller Disco, I see that same energy in motion: silliness as subversion, joy as a tactic. A skating protest might look ridiculous, but so did half of the great revolutions when they began. Play has always been political. The laugh, the costume, the dance ... all ways of saying you don't own my spirit. Can't get any more creative than that! 

After decades of navigating law, contracts, and geopolitics, I've come to believe that sincerity, genuine interest, and the ability to laugh freely, in defiance of structure and in celebration of living, may be the most serious leadership we never teach. 



Thursday, October 16, 2025

The Microwave's Guide to Operation Thaw


(a low-key survival manual for keeping warm in chilly seasons)

Forward: Why Thaw?

  • Because systems built on freezing crack under pressure.

  • Because the only ice-cube that lasts is the one in your drink (and even that melts).

  • Because when Jack Frost weaponizes chill, the best answer is warmth.

If you're reading this manual, congratulations. You have authority over one small domain: your appliances. Use it wisely.

Chapter 1: Pre-Heating

Before you can thaw the world, you must first defrost yourself. The human body runs best above despair and below outrage. Aim for simmer.

Checklist for Stable Operation:

  • Consume caffeine as a spiritual exercise, not a sport.

  • Keep a towl near your workstation (Emotional condensation is real).

  • Rotate news intake every 5 minutes like leftovers - prevents hotspots.

  • Never reheat yesterday's outrage; it hardens into ideology.

Pro Tip: Microwaves don't judge the food they heat. Emulate that.

Chapter 2: Handling Frozen Assets

If your friends, coworkers, or relatives have become emotionally cryogenic, handle with tongs. Direct confrontation only deepens the frost. Instead, use controlled bursts of warmth: jokes, shared snacks, neutral compliments.

Remember: you're not melting people; you're reminding them they are - like all of us - mostly made of water.

Signs of Thawing:

  • Small talk resumes.

  • Eye contact returns.

  • They begin to laugh at memes again.

If all else fails, reduce exposure. Every freezer door needs a seal.

Chapter 3: Defrost Mode

Younger humans absorb temperature faster than adults with longer shelf life. Keep their emotional thermostat steady. When they ask about the news, answer honestly but calmly: "Yes, things are strange right now, but so were dinosaurs: and look, we still have birds."

Encourage them to build forts, not factions. Teach them that kindness is an energy source more renewable than anger. Most importantly, let them see you laugh at absurdity. It's the only antidote to fear that scales.

Chapter 4: Reheating Leftovers

When systems grow cold and rigid, apply heat evenly.

Civic Cooking Tips:

  • Vote like you're setting a timer: routine, precise, without fanfare.

  • Fact-check quietly; loud arguments scorch the pan.

  • Support local reporters. They're the kitchen thermometers of democracy.

  • Avoid conspiracy recipes requiring "one secret ingredient." That's how food poisioning starts.

Chapter 5: The Importance of Venting

Pressure builds in sealed environments. Vent daily. You can blast the speaker and sing as loudly as possible, but make sure your environment is Karaoke-approved. In the event there are noise ordinances that must be observed, you can always try the three-minute microwave meditation:

  1. Close the door.

  2. Breathe in.

  3. Rotate slowly until centered (if someone asks, tell them you're checking the popcorn settings).

Chapter 6: Emergency Settings

If events escalate: blackouts, shutdowns, leaders frozen mid-sentence: remember, humans are low-tech.

Your emergency kit:

  • Flashlight, batteries, duct tape, passport, birth certificate, ID, patience.

  • Handwritten phone numbers.

  • Snacks that don't expire (emotionally or nutritionally).

  • One song that restores your inner teenager.

Keep these near the breaker panel. Or the liquor cabinet. Your choice.

Epilogue: The Law of Thermal Return

Kitchens teach patience. Most good things arrive a few degrees at a time, while somebody hums, somebody chops, and somebody else wipes the counter for a third time. The world outside can run hot and cold; inside, we mind the small rituals that keep the room aglow.

When evenings feel long, set the timer anyway. Call a neighbor. Text a friend. Trade recipes, not rumors. Invite new friends over for Sunday brunch. It's not about perfection, it's about community. Children learn more from potlucks than from speeches: how to wait their turn, how to share the last slice, and how to say thank you for the hands that help.

Keep an eye on the simple maintenance items you can control: replace lightbulbs, label jars, write down who borrowed your casserole dish (cause it's their turn to bring the cheeseburger casserole this Thanksgiving). Quiet order invites calm, and calm invites conversation and aids in coordination. Most frost gives up when it meats a steady routine.

If something burns, open a window. If something's underdone, give it another minute. We don't have to plan out the week's menu tonight. We just have to keep the kitchen warm enough that people want to come back tomorrow.

In the long run, that's how winters end: not with fanfare, but with neighbors lingering after dishes are dry, telling each other, "Same time next week?"


About the Author: Sophy Laughing

Dr. Sophy Laughing is not just a doctor of philosophy, she is a doctor of laughing. She thinks she has a good sense of humor, a levity she has been sharing with her friends and family since she was a young girl. She has been writing since she was a teenager and blogging since 2011. Over the years, her notebooks turned into essays, then into field notes on how people stay chill and calm on bad hair days. She's lived and worked in over 20 countries, each which had varying degrees of political and social unrest. Her noodlings blend humor, history, and practicality, treating philosophy not as abstraction but as a form of maintenance: how to keep the inner machinery from running out of batteries.

She believes in the small things that carry us through long winters: hobbies, rituals, creative detours, anything that anchors the hands while the mind resets. She doodles, makes stickers (which she shares with friends and strangers alike), and writes about presence - not as stillness, but as attention: the act of noticing the little things that inspire curiosity, wonderment, and goodwill.

For her, optimism isn't an emotion: it's an operating system. Seeing the good isn't blind faith; it's disciplined awareness. It's the practice of showing up for truth, raising good kids in a noisy world, and staying steady when others flinch.

Her writing shares one central idea: that every generation must relearn how to live with both vigilance and grace. Whether she's building infrastructure, leading teams, or sending a message to a friend, the theme remains the same: clarity, humor, and the deep conviction that human decency is our best defense against uncertainty.

She wrote this for anyone in need of a little laugh.