🏆 Contest #302 Winner!

Fiction Funny

Marcus Lee had twenty-seven dollars in his checking account and a sticky note on his fridge that read, “Succeed or starve.” He wasn’t dramatic by nature. The sticky note was practical. Inspirational, even. He had written it after watching a free webinar called Unleash the Inner Giant Within You, hosted by Bryce Chandler, America’s favorite millionaire-turned-messianic-life-coach—a man who looked like a cross between an energy drink and a televangelist caught mid-exorcism.


Marcus had signed up for a $299 seminar that promised to awaken his potential and maybe also whatever slept behind his eyeballs. He paid for it by borrowing from a guy he knew who still used burner phones and referred to ramen as “freedom noodles.”


Marcus didn’t expect salvation. He expected a plan. A graph. A ten-step program that smelled vaguely of cinnamon and collapsed under scrutiny.


But something strange happened after the confirmation email. Instead of the welcome packet and Zoom link, he got a schedule titled Speaker Certification Intensive, Tier Two.


At first, Marcus thought maybe this was part of the experience. Like, whoa, they're onboarding me into success already. He felt a buzz. A certainty. He printed the itinerary, packed his best polo, and took the Greyhound to a Holiday Inn conference center outside Cleveland.


The sign on the door read:


BECOME THE NEXT BRYCE CHANDLER


Below it:


Turn Your Pain Into Profits™


Marcus hesitated. Was this… the wrong room? Was he supposed to be in the audience?


But the greeter, a too-happy woman named Trixie with blinding veneers and the caffeinated energy of someone who hadn’t blinked since Tuesday, clapped him on the back and handed him a name badge.


“You made it! Speaker candidates to the left, observers to the right!”


Marcus drifted left. Mostly because Trixie looked like she’d tase him if he hesitated.


Day One: Branding the Pain


The first thing they did was break everyone into small groups to “discover your trauma niche.” Apparently, the key to success wasn’t success. It was pain. The more specific, the better. Marcus felt like he was auditioning for an emotionally abusive talent show.


“What’d you go through?” asked a wiry man with Bluetooth earbuds and an unsettling smile. His name tag read: Tyrone - Platinum Tier.


“Warehouse work, laid off. Grew up broke. Still broke,” Marcus said.


Tyrone nodded approvingly. “Perfect. That’s blue-collar burnout. Real hot right now. People love a comeback. You just need a catchphrase. Something spiritual but merchandisable.”


Marcus blinked.


A woman with glitter eyebrows and a Gucci knockoff chimed in. “Mine's You can't spell redemption without debt.”


The room applauded like she had solved climate change.


Someone handed Marcus a worksheet titled Pain to Pitch Pipeline and a mini bottle of hand sanitizer labeled Holy Hustle.


Day Two: The Funnel of Ascension


By now, Marcus had stopped asking questions. He just wrote everything down like a deranged scribe.


The sessions were increasingly absurd:


Tears That Close: Cry on Cue – Align Your Chakras and Your Revenue Streams


The Upsell Gospel: Turning Testimonials Into Tithes


Pose Like a Prophet: Mastering the Messiah Stance for Posters and Book Covers


They practiced mimicking Bryce Chandler’s signature laugh, which sounded like someone exorcising a credit score.


“You have to feel it,” said Coach Janelle, who once sold 14,000 copies of her ebook Grind Your Grief into Gold from a prison cell that she later claimed was metaphorical, although a quick Google search suggested otherwise.


“Feel what?” Marcus asked.


She leaned in, eyes wild. Her breath smelled like sage and vape-juice mango.


“The pain of others... as your opportunity.”


Marcus scribbled: pain = cha-ching? Also, maybe vomit?


Day Three: Anointed to Close


Marcus had started giving mock speeches. They filmed him on a stage with a backdrop that said Pain is the Pathway to Profitability and a faux stained-glass window featuring Bryce Chandler holding a golden microphone like he was auditioning to play Jesus in a Vegas musical.


He delivered lines he had scribbled on a napkin:


“I used to work in a warehouse. I stacked boxes. Now I stack blessings.”


The crowd of fellow trainees erupted.


He tried another:


“You don't need a degree. You need divine drive.”


A man named Carl wept so loudly a medic had to be called. It turned out to be a performance — Carl was part of the Tactical Testimony track. Also, Carl was allergic to sincerity.


They gave Marcus a standing ovation.


Trixie pulled him aside afterward, gripping a clipboard like it owed her money.


“You're a natural. You know we have a franchise mentorship tier, right? We license you as an official Chandler Disciple. You get the script, the visuals, even the tears algorithm. $15,000 buy-in. But with the way you're pitching? You’ll make that back easy.”


Marcus didn’t have fifteen thousand dollars. But he had a thought: What if I just do the thing... without paying for the thing?


So, he did.


The Rise of Marcus “AbsoluteLee”


He uploaded videos of himself yelling affirmations into a hairdryer. He launched a Squarespace site with 43 grammatical errors and a donation button labeled Anoint Me.


He rebranded himself as AbsoluteLee—a name that sounded like it had emerged from a fever dream in a self-help sauna. Every sentence he spoke ended with his own name like it was punctuation forged in delusion.


His videos escalated quickly. In one, he shouted at a woman quietly describing her autoimmune disorder in a comment under his livestream: “Can you DECIDE you’re going to beat this thing?!”


She typed back, “Well, it’s chronic, so—”


“Absolutely! AbsoluteLee!” he yelled at the camera, finger-pointing like a man auctioning off miracles. Somewhere in the comments, a fire emoji streaked by. The woman didn’t respond again.


His first talk was to a local chamber of commerce where he told three restaurant owners to “stop seasoning fear into their legacy.” One of them asked if that was a tax tip. The second was to a room full of multi-level marketing casualties who had come expecting therapy and left with fridge magnets that read Hustle or Die Trying. His third was a megachurch with more fog machines than functioning exits, where he was introduced as a “certified prosperity architect” and someone shouted “Preach!” before he even spoke.


He kept coming back to the same mantras: “Turn your trial into traction,” “The only poverty is the poverty of mindset,” and “Don’t chase checks. Chase clarity.”


People cheered. Sobbed. Paid.


He sold courses like Millionaire Mindset with Microwave Meals and a subscription box called Bless Up Crate, which included scented candles, fake testimonials, and a signed photo of him looking tearfully at a brick wall named “Resilience.”


He made motivational TikToks where he screamed “DESTINY DOESN’T DOUBT YOU” while eating raw eggs in slow motion.


Within six months, Marcus was clearing $20,000 a week and sleeping three hours a night, mostly upside down “to improve mindset circulation.”


The Email


It came from Bryce Chandler Global, LLC:


Subject: Unauthorized Use of Licensed Content


Dear Mr. Lee,


It has come to our attention that you have been using protected motivational material and branded techniques developed by Mr. Bryce Chandler without proper certification or affiliation. Cease and desist immediately or face legal action.


Marcus replied:


Dear Bryce,


Your tear cue module is garbage.


Cheers,


AbsoluteLee™ — trademark pending, obviously.


The Reckoning


It wasn’t Bryce who came for him.


It was Candace.


A single mother from Indiana who had spent her last child support check on Marcus’s Break the Chains seminar, which came with a lanyard, a PDF, and a lukewarm buffet of vegan chicken nuggets.


She cornered him in the parking lot outside a strip mall yoga studio with the sort of composure that precedes violence, standing next to her dented Honda with the engine still running and a toddler asleep in the back seat.


“I told you I was drowning in bills. My rent was three months late. I had to cancel my kid’s dentist appointment so I could afford your weekend intensive. You looked me dead in the eye and said: ‘Pain is just a mindset parasite! Can you decide you're going to beat this thing?! AbsoluteLee!’”


Marcus stared at her. She looked like the girl from the warehouse who used to bring cookies for everyone's birthdays.


“I knew it was bullshit. I just didn’t expect it to work so well. The lies weren’t the worst part — it was how much people needed them to be true.”


She shook her head. “You just put glitter on the guillotine.”


The Final Keynote


He was scheduled to speak at EmpowerCon 2025, sandwiched between a keto messiah and a VR shaman whose goggles had malfunctioned the night before, causing him to perform an exorcism on a potted plant.


Marcus stepped onto the stage.


Thousands of people. Hungry eyes. Desperate notebooks.


He took a breath.


“I came here to sell you a lie. Not because I wanted to. Because it worked.”


Gasps. Some applause. A nervous cough.


“They told me to weaponize my struggle. So, I did. But the truth is, there’s no formula. No secret sauce. Just us, surviving capitalism with vision boards and trauma merch.”


The room froze.


“You don’t need a guru. You need hazard pay. You don’t need a mindset shift. You need a union rep.”


The mic cut. The lights dimmed. Security whispered into radios.


Somewhere in the back, Trixie began twitching like a dying Roomba.


Marcus smiled.


Epilogue


The lawsuits came. One involved a man who claimed Marcus’s affirmation video convinced him to deadlift his cousin’s motorcycle and now he has three hernias and a GoFundMe.


The income vanished. The Squarespace site became a Russian poker ad. The subscription box turned into a subscription threat.


Bryce Chandler called him a “virus with veneers.”


Marcus returned to warehouse work. Minimum wage, maximum irony.


But sometimes, people would show up. Not with wallets.


With questions. With notebooks. With shaky hope.


And Marcus listened.


Not for applause. Not for tears.


Just because someone had to.


And that, somehow, was enough. Sort of.


Posted May 16, 2025
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106 likes 71 comments

Elizabeth Rich
17:45 May 23, 2025

Loved this! The MLM and the seminar hook. Fabulous.

Reply

Scott Monson
21:33 May 24, 2025

Thank you, Elizabeth!

Reply

Alexis Araneta
17:40 May 23, 2025

Ha! That was such a fun read. Such a great commentary on the (unfortunately) pervasive work culture present today. Love the bite in the tone. Brilliant work!

Reply

Scott Monson
21:32 May 24, 2025

Thank you, Alexis! The work culture commentary was a key thread I hoped would resonate, so it’s really validating to hear that came across. That was definitely part of the fun in writing it. I truly appreciate you reading and leaving such a kind comment!

Reply

17:40 May 23, 2025

Totally understand why this story won. Great job, Scott. This was awesome. Had me cracking up and reflecting at the same time. Awesome Sauce

Reply

Scott Monson
21:28 May 24, 2025

Thanks so much, Millicent! You picked up exactly what I was going for, laughs with a thoughtful twist. Really appreciate your kind words!

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Story Time
17:29 May 23, 2025

It had a lot of "His Girl Friday" to it, and I loved that. So many great lines and a developed sense of style. Great job.

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Scott Monson
21:25 May 24, 2025

Wow, thank you! Comparing it to "His Girl Friday" is high praise! I’m really flattered and glad you enjoyed the read.

Reply

Valery Rubin
16:35 May 23, 2025

Thank you. This is very relevant. Such fraudulent courses are now in fashion and trend. The author has deeply penetrated the essence of this advertising strategy. The style and topic of the story are good.

Reply

Scott Monson
21:23 May 24, 2025

Really grateful for your comment, thank you! I wanted the humor to land first, but also highlight those who prey on hope. Really glad that came through.

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Rebecca Hurst
15:28 May 23, 2025

Congratulations, Scott! What a great opening bat!

Reply

Scott Monson
15:42 May 23, 2025

Thanks, Rebecca! Might be time to buy a lottery ticket! 😂

Reply

John Rutherford
13:39 May 23, 2025

Congratulations

Reply

Scott Monson
15:26 May 23, 2025

Thank you, John!

Reply

Mary Bendickson
13:14 May 23, 2025

Congrats on the win and welcome to Reedsy
🥳
Humor in truth.
Thanks for liking 'Poor Little Rich Girl' and 'Fever'
And following.

Reply

Scott Monson
15:25 May 23, 2025

Thanks, Mary! 🎉 Such a wonderful and welcoming place to have stumbled upon!

Reply

Stevie Burges
08:32 May 19, 2025

I also note that this is your first story on Reedsy, so hopefully there will be more.

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Scott Monson
17:07 May 20, 2025

Thank you for the encouragement, Stevie — there definitely will be!

Reply

Stevie Burges
09:24 May 18, 2025

The unfortunate part of the story was that, frankly, it could be true. In a very uncomfortable way, I thoroughly enjoyed it. I revelled in my meanness that has allowed me to not attend, not get involved, or remotely participate in "Seminars" despite being told again and again that I must. Beautifully observed and wittily told. Thanks.

Reply

Scott Monson
19:52 May 18, 2025

Thank you so much for reading and for your thoughtful comment — it made my day! It means a lot that the story resonated, even in that uncomfortable, familiar way. Your perspective really speaks to that tension the story was aiming for — the unease of watching something absurd that’s only barely fiction. Grateful for your kind words and glad you enjoyed the story!

Reply

Zobiya Ameen
09:58 Jun 11, 2025

Wow, powerful prose!

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05:17 Jun 06, 2025

This was actually fucking sick I'm inspired to start scamming people when I grow up too (; Do you think doing homework as a kid would count as trauma because if it does I'm set you can call me like Zero Self EstLeem

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Marilyn Flower
01:21 Jun 03, 2025

What a great satire/spoof of a worthy opponent, one that people have unwittingly sacrificed their hard-earned money into! Bravo for both the vision and the execution, Scott! And come to find out, your story has a soul. Exposing the hype, and taking what comes from so doing. What a mensch! Thank you and congratulations!

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