
Another Question for Mark: Where Is the Evidence You “Almost Died” in the Fire?
January 20, 2026
“I Am Not the Narcissist,” He Declares,
January 22, 2026If You Miss Liam, Prove It.
There is a clear, documented path back to your son.
Not a mystery.
Not a conspiracy.
Not a spiritual battle.
Not a waiting game.
A path.
And for over two years, you have not taken a single step.
Instead, you post photos.
Old photos.
Safe photos.
Photos from a time when no one was documenting your behavior, your interference, or the harm that followed. Photos that let strangers feel something without asking you to do anything.
That isn’t missing a child.
That’s performing grief.
Love That Misses Moves
Parents who genuinely miss their children do uncomfortable things.
They:
- Show up to assessments they don’t like
- Submit to evaluations that challenge their self-image
- Accept professional authority
- Stop arguing and start complying
- Take accountability instead of crafting narratives
They do not sit motionless at the base of the mountain, posting about how much they long for the summit.
You were not locked out.
You were given conditions.
And conditions require effort.
The Silence That Matters
What’s missing from your posts is not emotion — it’s action.
No mention of:
- Completing required assessments
- Engaging in treatment
- Demonstrating behavioral change
- Acknowledging documented medical harm
- Taking responsibility for interference
That silence is not accidental.
Because the moment you take the first step, the performance ends — and facts take over.
“I Miss You” Without Effort Is Emotional Theft
When you say “I miss you” publicly while refusing to do what’s required privately, you are asking the world to sympathize with a loss you are actively choosing to maintain.
That isn’t tragedy.
That’s refusal.
You are not being kept away from Liam.
You are standing still.
The Hard Truth
If missing your son were truly unbearable, compliance would be easy.
You would already be doing the work.
Instead, you post.
You wait.
You blame.
You frame yourself as the victim of a system you refuse to engage.
And then you ask people to feel sorry for you.
So Here’s the Challenge
Stop posting about missing Liam.
Start acting like you do.
Take the steps.
Do the work.
Accept accountability.
Let professionals evaluate you instead of your followers affirm you.
Because love doesn’t live on social media.
Love shows up — even when it’s humbling, inconvenient, and hard.
Until then, your posts aren’t proof of care.
They’re proof of avoidance.
And Liam deserves better than nostalgia.



The Watch That Tells Time — and Priorities
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