I Taught Everyone That I Was Fine

I don’t blame the people around me for not understanding how bad it gets sometimes.

They only know what I’ve shown them.

And what I’ve shown them — for a long time — is that I can handle anything.

But here’s the truth:

I did myself a disservice by making this look easier than it is.

By softening the edges of my pain.

By hiding the fatigue behind makeup, jokes, and “I’m fine.”

I taught everyone that I was okay, and now no one knows what it means when I’m not.

The Quiet Pressure to Be the “Strong One”

It started small — the polite kind of pretending.

A smile in the waiting room. A “good day” text to someone who was worried.

Then it became habit. Then it became armor.

I didn’t want pity. I didn’t want to make people uncomfortable. I didn’t want to be that person whose presence made the room feel heavy.

So I stayed upbeat. I said “I’m tired” instead of “I’m in agony.”

I joked about hospital food and called chemo “spa day” to make people laugh.

And every time I did that, I built a version of myself that people could handle — not the one who actually exists.

Normalizing the Impossible

There were nights I went out knowing I should’ve stayed in bed.

Days I showed up smiling while my bones screamed and my head spun.

I’ve sat through dinners where every bite felt like swallowing glass.

But I wanted normalcy so badly that I faked it.

I convinced myself that showing up half-alive was better than not showing up at all.

And in doing that, I convinced everyone else that I was fine — even on the days I was barely functioning.

People started saying things like, “You’re such a fighter,” or “You make it look easy.”

They meant it as a compliment.

They didn’t realize it broke my heart a little every time.

Because if I make it look easy, no one knows how hard it really is.

When Rest Becomes a Red Flag

Now, when I cancel plans, people assume something must be really wrong.

When I say I need to rest, there’s panic in their eyes.

When I turn down an invitation, I can almost hear the worry in their silence — Is she getting worse?

But the truth is, it’s always been this bad.

I just stopped letting anyone see it.

I taught them that I could keep up. That I could push through anything. That my 10/10 pain was still somehow manageable.

So now, when I finally let myself rest, it feels like I’m disappointing people.

Like I’m breaking a promise I never meant to make.

The Guilt That Comes With Being Honest

I’m learning that honesty has consequences when you’ve built your identity around resilience.

People see you as their anchor. Their fighter. Their reminder that “things could be worse.”

And the moment you say, “Actually, this really sucks,” the illusion cracks.

But I can’t keep protecting people from the truth of what this life feels like.

I can’t keep pretending this is easy just because it makes others more comfortable watching me go through it.

Because I am tired.

Not the kind of tired that a nap fixes — the kind that seeps into your bones and lingers behind your smile.

The kind that comes from carrying your own pain and everyone else’s discomfort with it.

Teaching People How to See Me Again

I don’t need people to fix it. I just need them to understand that the version of me they’ve seen isn’t the full story.

That “doing better” doesn’t always mean “feeling better.”

That some days, showing up looks like staying in bed.

I’m starting to show the truth again — slowly, carefully.

I’m saying “I can’t” without a list of excuses.

I’m letting silence be the answer sometimes.

I’m learning to believe that I don’t owe anyone my endurance.

Because I’ve spent enough years proving I can keep going.

Now I just want to be allowed to stop.

The New Lesson

If I taught people that I was fine, I can teach them something else.

That pain can exist quietly and still matter.

That strength can look like rest.

That survival isn’t about pretending — it’s about enduring in whatever form you can.

So here’s the new truth:

I’m not fine all the time.

And that’s okay.

I don’t need to make it look easy anymore. I just need to make it honest.

Subscriber Note 💌

If you’ve ever convinced the world you were okay just to make it through the day — you’re seen here.

You can subscribe [here] for new posts from Mojo and the Mess — written for the ones who make it look easy when it isn’t.

4 responses to “I Taught Everyone That I Was Fine”

  1. mshibdonssciencelab Avatar

    I see you. I’m here. I love you.

    Hugs

    Like

  2. Susan Ketzel Avatar

    So much truth spoken here. Women are always the ones that stay strong for others even when we aren’t.

    Liked by 1 person

  3. alwayselectronic06c81330f4 Avatar
    alwayselectronic06c81330f4

    My girl. You never have to be anything other th

    Like

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I’m Izzy

Welcome to mojo and the mess, This isn’t the blog I ever expected to write — but it’s the one I needed.

I’m Izzy, a twenty-something living (and dying) with terminal cancer, navigating the messy, heartbreaking, unexpectedly beautiful in-between. Here, you’ll find raw reflections, real talk, dog snuggles (shoutout to Mojo), and the unfiltered truth about what it’s like to face the end of your life before it really got going.

This space is for the ones who’ve felt forgotten, the ones who don’t know what to say, and the ones who are still holding on. It’s not always pretty, but it’s always honest.

Thanks for being here. You’re part of the mess now — and I mean that in the best way.

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