Hi Reader, The days after the holidays can feel strangely unmoored. Not quite rest. Not quite routine. Just that in-between space where your body is tired, your rhythm is off, and everything that used to feel automatic suddenly takes effort. If youāve been feeling that lately, youāre not behind. Youāre recalibrating. I wrote a new post this week about what it actually looks like to rebuild daily rhythm after the holidays when you live with chronic illness. Not the āget back on trackā version....
8 days agoĀ ā¢Ā 1 min read
Hi Reader, I wrote this for you if the New Year already feels heavy. Not because you donāt want things to be better, but because the pressure to reset, optimize, and push harder doesnāt actually fit your body anymore. Especially when youāre living with chronic illness and your energy doesnāt follow tidy timelines. Every January, thereās this unspoken expectation that now is the moment to fix everything. New routines. New habits. New discipline. And even when we know that kind of thinking...
15 days agoĀ ā¢Ā 1 min read
Hi Reader,When winter slows you down more than you expected, it can mess with your head a bit. The quieter days, the lower energy, the sense that you should be doing more with your time even when your body is clearly saying otherwise. That tension used to show up for me every winter, especially while living with chronic illness. For a long time, I treated winter like something to push through. Shorter days felt like a challenge to overcome rather than a season to move with. And when I...
22 days agoĀ ā¢Ā 1 min read
Hi Reader, As the year winds down, a lot of people start talking about clarity, lessons, and what they plan to do differently. But if youāre living with chronic illness, the end of the year often carries a different kind of weight. It can feel like youāre holding the sum of twelve unpredictable months in your body, not neatly tucked into a journal or tied together in a tidy reflection. I found myself reaching this season without the usual energy to make meaning out of everything. There wasnāt...
29 days agoĀ ā¢Ā 1 min read
Thereās this point in December where the world seems to speed upāeven if youāre standing still. The invites stack up, the errands multiply, and everyone starts talking about āmaking the most of the seasonā like that phrase means the same thing for everyone. But when youāre living with chronic illness, your capacity doesnāt expand just because the calendar says it should. Thatās what I kept thinking as I wrote this weekās postānot about how to squeeze more joy into a season thatās already too...
about 1 month agoĀ ā¢Ā 1 min read
Hi Reader, Some weeks make it painfully clear that the world moves at a pace many of us simply canāt match. And if youāve ever felt discouraged by how quickly everyone else seems to juggle work, home, errands, and life in general, youāre not alone. Thereās a kind of pressure woven into our culture that tells us weāre supposed to keep up no matter what our bodies are doing. But what happens when you live with chronic illness and that pressure hits up against a body that doesnāt respond on...
about 1 month agoĀ ā¢Ā 1 min read
Hi Reader, Thereās something about this time of year that brings up a strange combination of anticipation and pressure. The world starts shifting into celebration mode, and even if you love parts of the season, it can still feel like the pace around you speeds up long before your body is ready to match it. Lately,a Iāve been noticing all the small ways the holidays feel different when your energy is limited and your symptoms donāt take a break just because the calendar says itās time to...
about 2 months agoĀ ā¢Ā 1 min read
Hey Reader, Iāve been thinking a lot about how the world talks about gratitudeāespecially this time of year. It always seems to show up in neat little quotes and posts that say things likeāThereās always something to be thankful for.āāChoose gratitude.āāGratitude turns what you have into enough.ā I donāt know about you, but when Iām navigating symptoms, appointments, side effects, and just trying to get through the week in one piece⦠that kind of messaging feels disconnected at best. At...
about 2 months agoĀ ā¢Ā 1 min read
I used to think a couple of hours in the car couldnāt possibly wipe me out. But year after year, Iād come home from holiday trips completely drainedāand I couldnāt figure out why. Iād tell myself, āItās just a quick drive.ā But between packing, planning, cleaning, and trying to be present with everyone once we arrived, Iād run out of energy long before the holidays even began. It took me a long time to realize that I wasnāt doing anything wrong. I was just approaching travel the same way I...
2 months agoĀ ā¢Ā 1 min read