Every single day that I drag my ass through a physical therapy workout—and weekends too—I earn this one stupid, glorious ritual. It is not some Instagram-perfect thing (although I definitely try to make it as such). It is me, alone in my kitchen in the afternoon, slicing up a crisp apple/pear, then drowning it in thick, creamy mixed nut butter (Nuttzo). Spoonfuls. Fingerfuls. Straight-from-the-jar licks that leave my tongue sticky and my soul satisfied in a way no proper dinner ever could (my boyfriend loves when I go through an entire jar in one week/ask him to buy me more).
But there is a catch—the part nobody sees, the part that turns this “reward” into a full-contact sport: I have to stand up and get the damn bowl first.
I used to play it safe. I took dishes from the dishwasher only. Staying planted in my chair like a queen on her throne, never risking the wobble. Grab what I need without ever testing gravity. Easy. Predictable. Cowardly as hell. My body had already betrayed me enough; why invite more drama? I would tell myself it was smart. Strategic. But it was fear wearing a productivity mask.
Not anymore.
I crave the hard way. I need it. Standing on my own two feet—literally—feels like flipping off every limitation my recovery tried to slap on me. Because recovery is not a straight line or a cute little progress chart. Sometimes it is me making things way more complicated than it has to be, just to prove I still can. Just to remind the universe (and my own nervous system) that I am not done fighting.
So here is how the ritual goes down:
I wheel my chair up to the cabinet, perfectly parallel. Doors flung open—top two, still seated, no heroics yet. My fingers slide onto the top shelf while my thumb hooks through the bottom doors, creating this weird, improvised harness. The shelf becomes my lifeline. My crutch. My middle finger to the dizziness that still tries to own me.
Then the real starts.
I push up. Slow. Deliberate. Left foot always betrays me first—lifts clean off the floor because my brain, traitorous as it is, only trusts the right side. It is like my body has a built-in bias: “Right side strong, left side… eh, we’ll see.” Unless I consciously force it, I shift hard left, hips tilting, core screaming. I hover there for a second, half-standing, half-praying, every muscle in my legs and back locked in a death grip.
Vertical. Finally.
But I am still white-knuckling the shelf. Not free. Not yet.
Now comes the money shot: I have to let go.
My right hand releases. Then reaches deep into the cabinet for those elongated bowls—the big ones that actually hold a proper snack mountain instead of some sad little molehill. My legs start quivering. I clench everything—glutes, quads, abs, even my goddamn jaw—just to stay upright. My left arm bends up toward my chest like it is trying to hug itself for comfort, sometimes flailing wild like a drunk. One wrong twitch and I am knocking over glasses, plates, the whole fragile ecosystem of my kitchen. Heart pounding.
For those three terrifying seconds, I am completely on my own. No shelf. No chair. No safety net. Just me, my shaky legs, and the stubborn refusal to sit back down like the old version of me would have.
And then—boom—I snag the bowl.
I drop back into the chair like I just summited Everest, grinning like an idiot, breathing hard, maybe even laughing at how ridiculous it all is. Because it is ridiculous. A grown woman turning a cabinet reach into a high-stakes balance beam routine just to eat fruit and nut butter. But that is the point. That quiver? That tremble is the sound of my body remembering it is still mine. That is recovery screaming, “Look at me, fucker—I stood.”
The snack tastes better after that. Sweeter. Crunchier. The nut butter hits different when you earned it through actual effort instead of autopilot. I slice the apple, with one hand (and the edges of my counter for stabilizing said apple), into perfect wedges splayed around the edges of the bowl, dollop the butter, then lick the spoon clean and go back for finger scoops straight from the jar because rules are for people who did not just fight gravity and win.

Every time I do this, I am rewriting the script. The old script said: Protect yourself. Stay small. Don’t risk falling. The new one says: Make it hard. Make it count. Stand anyway.
Recovery is not always the big, flashy milestones—walking without aids, running a 5K, whatever the highlight reel sells you. Sometimes it is this. A bowl. A snack. A deliberate choice to do the scary thing because the easy way out stopped feeling like living.
So yeah, I tremble. I wobble. I clench every muscle like my life depends on it (and some days, it kinda feels like it does). But I stand. I reach. I get the fucking bowl.
And then I sit down and enjoy the hell out of my reward. Some days I get it all over my clothes as I scoop straight from my lap in a sad attempt of stabilizing the jar and some days it takes me almost an entire hour– simply because I am eating my nut butter whilst parked in the kitchen.
Ultimately I do not take the shortcut.
I took the fight.
And damn, it feels good.

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