Every single afternoon, after the nap my body demands like a stubborn toddler, I film myself walking. It is only about ten feet. To most people, that probably looks like nothing at all. But to me, those ten feet are everything. A step closer. They are proof that I am still moving forward—literally—one brave, wobbly step at a time. It feels incredible.
My days start brutally early. I am up at 4 a.m., already chasing the version of myself I desire. By the time lunch is over, my body is spent from the morning’s workout and the constant grind of rehabilitation. My eyes grow heavy, my muscles scream for mercy, and I surrender to the bed like a little baby who earned her nap time. I used to fight it, but I learned to listen. The nap is not weakness; it is fuel. When I wake up an hour or two later, something magical happens. Energy surges back. Determination reignites. And suddenly I am excited—actually excited—to challenge myself again.
That is when I head to the back deck.
I strap on my brace even though I hate it. Most days I go without, stubborn as hell, refusing any device that reminds me I am not “normal” yet. But when I am about to push my limits, safety first applies (*eye roll*). The deck has a sturdy railing on one side—my own private parallel bar. I used to grip it at first, today I just walk along it slowly, no longer feeling the wood warm under my palm. At the end of the railing, I just stand there, working on my balance. Feet planted, core engaged, eyes focused on a spot in the distance (the heating lamp usually). The world narrows to that single task: don’t fall.
I film every attempt. Sometimes it is a clean walk. Sometimes it is shaky. First, my left (weak) leg pushes forward. That is the easy one. I do not need balance or strength help on this side, but then I have to shift onto this weak side and move my right leg forward. Sometimes the left side refuses to hold me up. Sometimes I end up on the ground. I have fallen more times than I can count out there—head cracking against the deck, shoulder slamming into the wall. Each bruise is a story. Each tumble is data.
I send the videos to my boyfriend anyway. I do not even know if he is watching them but the simple act of having an audience changes everything. It turns a lonely struggle into a performance. It makes me bolder. I love showing off for him. There is something powerful about letting the person you love witness your rawest, most determined moments.
I remember the early days when I had to clutch that railing for dear life, knuckles white, heart pounding. Letting go felt terrifying—like stepping off a cliff (hence why I wear my brace out there— in case my weak side refuses to hold me upright). But I did it anyway. Because I want this more than I fear the falls. I want to walk across a room without thinking. I want to stroll through a park holding his hand instead of a cane or brace. I want zero differentiation between me and everyone else. No explanations. No pitying glances. Just me, moving through the world the way I used to—freely, confidently, joyfully.
This recovery is not linear. Some days the ten feet feel like a marathon. Other days I surprise myself and push for more. The falls rarely happen anymore , but they sting a little less because I know they are temporary. Every time I stand back up, dust myself off, and hit record again, I am rewriting my story.
Small steps matter. Naps are not laziness; they are strategy. Now I see that my stubborn refusal to stay down is beautiful. I keep filming. Keep showing off. Keep chasing the version othat refuses to be defined by limitations.
I am not there yet. But every afternoon, after my nap, I get a little closer. Ten feet at a time.
And it feels amazing.

I am already dreaming bigger—longer distances, no railing, maybe even a real walk around the block. I will keep sharing the journey here, bruises and all.





