
Life’s been heavy lately. The kind of heavy where words don’t come easily.
Instead of a post about what’s going on, I decided to create this in Canva.
It makes my heart happy.
Sometimes that’s exactly what we need.

Life’s been heavy lately. The kind of heavy where words don’t come easily.
Instead of a post about what’s going on, I decided to create this in Canva.
It makes my heart happy.
Sometimes that’s exactly what we need.
I recently came across a post from A Disabled Icon on Facebook talking about internalized ableism and how many people who become disabled later in life are also trying to unpack the ableist beliefs they grew up with.
Honestly, it hit me harder than I expected.
When you grow up in an able-bodied world, surrounded mostly by able-bodied people, you absorb things without even realizing it. You learn that productivity equals worth. You learn that asking for help is weakness. You learn that pushing through pain is admirable. You learn that independence is the goal.
Then one day your body changes.
And suddenly you’re trying to survive in the exact kind of body society quietly taught you to fear becoming.
I wasn’t born disabled. I remember who I was before.
I was fiercely independent. I had big dreams. I wanted to hike mountains in other countries. I wanted an animal sanctuary. I wanted a hobby farm filled with rescued animals. When I once asked my best friend what she thought I would be like if I hadn’t become disabled, she answered without hesitation:
“A force to reckon with.”
That answer stuck with me.
Because when people ask what I miss about life before disability, it’s easy to talk about the physical things. But what I really miss are the dreams. I miss the certainty that those dreams were still ahead of me.
One of the hardest things about becoming disabled later in life is that you’re constantly comparing yourself to a version of yourself that no longer exists.
For me, internalized ableism often sounds like:
“Why can’t I do things like I used to?”
“I should be doing more.”
“I miss the old me.”
Sometimes it even sounds like blame.
I’ve spent years wondering if different choices could have changed the outcome. If I had left the farm. If I had done something differently. As if disability was somehow a personal failure instead of something that happened to me.
But internalized ableism isn’t just the thoughts we have about ourselves.
Sometimes it changes the choices we make.
A trainer once told me I would never be able to use the elliptical safely. Instead of hearing concern, I heard a challenge. I wanted to prove her wrong.
Turns out, she was right. Today I have a torn meniscus in my right knee.
For years, I avoided using walking aids because I was made to feel weak for needing them. So I didn’t use them.
I fell.
A lot.
Now both of my knees are damaged.
Looking back, I wasn’t fighting my disability.
I was fighting the shame attached to it.
That realization has been difficult to sit with.
Because the truth is, I would never judge another disabled person the way I judge myself. I would never tell someone else they’re weak for using a cane, walker, wheelchair, or other mobility aid. I would never tell them their worth depends on how productive they are.
Yet somehow, I’ve spent years applying those standards to myself.
Another thing A Disabled Icon mentioned was the concept of a disability doula. Someone who helps people navigate not only the medical side of disability, but the emotional side too. The grief. The identity shift. The adjustment. The humanity of it all.
I found that idea incredibly beautiful.
Because disability changes more than your body.
It changes how you move through the world.
How the world sees you.
And sometimes, how you see yourself.
I’m still learning.
Still unlearning.
Still figuring out how to show myself the same compassion I offer other people.
Maybe healing isn’t learning how to become the person I was before.
Maybe healing is learning how to value the person I am now.
I’ve changed. I’m different but it’s not a bad.
That is a beautiful thing.

Some weekends arenât about doing more.
Sometimes theyâre about slowing down, breathing deeply, and letting your heart catch up.
This morningâs view reminded me that even heavy seasons can still hold quiet beauty.
Have a safe Memorial Day đż
Sometimes the best days arenât the big vacations or perfectly planned adventures. Sometimes theyâre just quiet little escapes with the person you love most.
Last week, we took a mini trip for my birthday and spent the day doing what we needed most…slowing down.

We wandered by the water, enjoyed the sunshine, and ate food that probably contained enough calories for an entire week. Totally worth it. Would absolutely do it again.
Somewhere between stacked onion rings, giant burgers, chocolate ice cream, and peaceful views of the lake, life felt a little lighter again.


Little did we know that one of our other favorite places, about 70 miles north of where we were, would soon be battling devastating wildfires. Seeing the photos afterward was heartbreaking. Places tied to memories can start to feel personal, even when they arenât home.
It was a reminder that moments like these matter more than we realize while weâre living them.
Lately things have been heavy, so this day reminded me that joy doesnât always arrive in huge life-changing moments. Sometimes it shows up quietly: in shared meals, calm water, a drive together, and time with someone who makes life better simply by being there.
And honestly? Thatâs enough for me.

This week was heavy.
Iâm not going to try to dress this week up into something it wasnât.
It was hard.
Thereâs been a lot happening behind the scenes: working through my disability application, trying to stay on top of everything that comes with that, and at the same time, helping my mom through appointments that didnât go the way we hoped.
Itâs the kind of week where everything stacks up at once. I was super overwhelmed.
Where your brain doesnât really get a break, even when youâre technically âresting.âWhere youâre trying to hold it together for everyone else, but you can feel yourself getting worn down in the process.
I donât have a lesson tied up neatly at the end of this. I donât have a big realization or a âthis is what it all meansâ moment.
Iâm just tired.
And I think thatâs okay to say.
Thereâs a strange pressure sometimes to turn every difficult moment into something uplifting. To find the silver lining right away. To make it make sense before youâve even had time to feel it.
But some weeks donât need to be fixed.
Some weeks just need to be acknowledged.
So thatâs what this is.
Just me saying: this week was heavy.
Iâve been trying to find small moments where I can breathe again. Nothing big. Nothing life-changing. Just small things.
Opening the windows for a little while.
Sitting outside, even if itâs just in the car.
Putting my phone on do not disturb and listening to music for a bit.
Playing my favorite video games.
Not solutionsâjust pauses.
And right now, that feels like enough.
If youâve had a week like this too, where everything feels like a little too much, where you’re feeling very overwhelmed, youâre not alone in that.
Sometimes the best thing we can do is stop trying to push through so hard, and just admit where weâre at.
Iâm hoping next week feels a little lighter.
But for now, Iâm just giving myself permission to be where I am.
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