It is easy to see myself as wounded.
Easy to see the losses, the grief, the pain my body still carries.
There have been times when chronic pain left me feeling broken, defeated, and far from whole.
Yet when I look back over the last thirty years, I see something else.
I see a woman who traveled from self-hatred to self-love.
No small journey.
No small miracle.
Recovery taught me compassion. It taught me forgiveness. It taught me how to look in the mirror and love the person looking back.
And just when I thought I had found my footing, physical pain arrived to teach me something new.
Fibromyalgia.
Knee pain.
Bladder pain.
Each one touching the frightened child within me—the little girl who learned early to fear pain and brace for punishment.
Today, I understand that she still lives inside me.
And today, I speak to her differently.
I remind her that the danger has passed.
That she is safe.
That she is loved.
That the past is over.
Perhaps healing is not becoming someone new.
Perhaps it is remembering that beneath every wound, we have always been whole.