Last year, I moved my entire life on my own.
Across countries. Across uncertainties. Across a version of me that had learned to survive no matter what.
But the truth is this didn’t begin last year.
This story began six years ago.
For six years, I carried stress that never truly left me. I learned how to function while hurting. How to show up while breaking. How to keep going when life did not pause for me to breathe.
In between, I chose growth. I chose to study. I completed my Master’s while navigating emotional storms that no one could see. From the outside, it may have looked like progress.And it was. But beneath that progress was a constant state of holding, enduring, pushing.
Then came the move.
A big one. A life-altering one.
Moving countries alone.
No emotional support.
No financial safety net.
No one to share the weight of decisions, delays, or disappointments.
Just me.
Managing payments that didn’t come on time. Handling shipments that tested my patience. Figuring out logistics while carrying a mind already exhausted from years of strain.
I kept telling myself:
“Just get through this.”
“You’ve handled worse.”
“Be strong.”
And I was.
But strength, when stretched over years without rest, quietly turns into exhaustion.
Somewhere along the way, I stopped checking in with myself. The tiredness changed form. It was no longer just physical. It became emotional. Then mental.Then something deeper something silent.
A fatigue that no amount of sleep could heal. And then, my body spoke. Not suddenly but inevitably. Because when you carry stress for years… when you override your needs again and again, when you survive instead of process.
The body remembers.
And one day, it says:
“Enough.”
“You’ve carried this long enough.”
“Now, it’s my turn to be heard.”
I realize now
I wasn’t just moving homes or countries.
I was carrying six years of unprocessed weight into a new chapter without putting it down.
This phase of health challenges is not separate from my journey. It is deeply connected to it. Not as a punishment, but as a pause I never gave myself. For the longest time, I believed strength meant:
Keep going.
Don’t stop.
Handle it alone.
Now I am learning something different.
That strength can also look like:
• Resting without guilt
• Asking for help
• Slowing down
• Letting yourself feel what you once suppressed
There is a quiet courage in admitting:
“I cannot do this all alone anymore.”
“I am tired of being strong all the time.”
“I need to take care of myself too.”
Today, I don’t see my body as failing me.
I see it as holding me accountable to my own humanity.
Asking me to soften.
To listen.
To finally come back to myself.
Closing Reflection:
Sometimes, the journey is not about how far you’ve come but how much you’ve carried to get there. And sometimes, healing begins the moment you allow yourself to finally put that weight down.
A Note to My Daughters:
My dear beautiful girls,
I want you to understand something your mother learned the hard way. Strength is not just in holding everything together. It is also in knowing when to pause, when to rest, when to ask for help.
For years, I carried more than I should have silently, fiercely, and alone. Not because I wanted to suffer, but because I believed that was what strength looked like.
But life has a way of teaching you differently. It showed me that even the strongest hearts need space to breathe.
That even the bravest souls need support.
And that ignoring your own pain does not make you stronger it only delays your healing.
I don’t want you to grow up thinking you have to carry the world on your shoulders.
I want you to:
• Speak when something feels heavy
• Rest without guilt
• Ask for help without feeling weak
• And most importantly, never abandon yourself while trying to hold everything else together
If you ever feel lost, tired, or overwhelmed…
know that it’s okay. You don’t have to be strong all the time.
Just be real.
Be kind to yourself.
And come back to your heart.
Everything I went through every challenge, every tear, every lesson was not just to survive. It was to become a woman who could one day teach you:
That your well-being matters.
That your voice matters.
And that you, just as you are, are always enough. With all my ❤️
