My life didn’t change only because of the diagnosis. It started to change in the way people began to see me… and, even worse, in the way I almost forgot who I was.
At first, it wasn’t courage. It was confusion. Fear. And a heavy silence no one around me knew how to fill.
Before, I didn’t think about living. I just lived. After that… everything became calculated.
Every step became a decision.
Every movement became a risk.
Every outing became a strategy.
But the biggest change wasn’t physical. It was identity.
Because when your body changes, the world tries to convince you that you’ve become less. And if you’re not careful… You start to believe it.
I came close.
Close to reducing myself to a diagnosis. Close to accepting a smaller version of who I am.
But life — in its hardest way — taught me something else: Limitations are not the end of identity.
They are the beginning of a confrontation with it.
And I started to see. The looks. The discomfort. The lack of accessibility… and the excess of opinions.