
The first symptom was so small you almost laughed it off. Then came the nights you couldn’t breathe, the days your hands wouldn’t stop shaking, the quiet terror you hid from everyone. You kept working. Kept smiling. Kept saying, “I’m fine.” Until your body finally screamed louder than your excuses, and everythin… Continues…
You didn’t collapse in some cinematic, dramatic scene. It came in the middle of your ordinary life, the moment you realized you couldn’t outrun yourself anymore. Sitting under fluorescent lights or staring at a steering wheel, you felt your heart hammering, your chest tightening, the air disappearing. For the first time, you understood: this wasn’t weakness. It was a warning.
The diagnosis didn’t magically fix anything, but it gave your pain a name—and with that, a doorway. Healing began the moment you chose to stop betraying yourself. You canceled plans. You let the emails wait. You risked being misunderstood rather than silently destroyed. Rest stopped feeling like laziness and started feeling like survival. Slowly, your hands steadied, your breath returned, and the world softened at the edges. In the mirror, you no longer searched for the version of you who could “handle it all.” You met someone braver: the you who finally chose to live gently, and stay.