There’s no calculator for this kind of math.
Every day starts with a handful of pills and a question that no doctor can really answer: how much relief is worth the cost?
Because relief always has a price.
You weigh the nausea against the pain. The fog against the ache. The side effects against the tiny pocket of peace that might last a few hours if you get the timing right. You start to think like a pharmacist and a gambler at the same time — betting on milligrams and hours instead of cards and dice.
There’s a rhythm to it now.
A pattern of alarms and bottles lined up like soldiers on the counter. Some are new. Some are worn down from years of being opened by shaking hands. Each one carries its own promise and its own warning label — may cause dizziness, may cause drowsiness, may cause you to forget who you were before all this started.
And nothing just does good.
The nausea meds trigger migraines. The pain meds tear up your stomach. The steroids make your heart race until you can feel every beat echo in your throat. Every pill fixes one thing and breaks something else. It’s a constant trade-off — a balancing act between hurting and harming.
And then there are the days when nothing works.
When the meds that usually dull the pain just… don’t. When your stomach revolts. When your brain feels like it’s running on low battery and static. You sit there staring at the clock, knowing you can’t take more yet, but not sure how you’ll make it until you can.
People say “listen to your body,” but mine speaks in riddles now.
It doesn’t whisper what it needs — it screams in symptoms. I’ve learned to translate the language of pain into dosage and timing. I’ve learned that sometimes helping yourself means swallowing another pill and sometimes it means walking away from the bottle entirely.
I don’t love this math.
I hate that it’s become part of my identity — that every meal, every plan, every night of sleep is dictated by what I took and when. But this is survival. And survival isn’t neat or linear or pretty. It’s a messy equation that never quite balances, but somehow, I keep solving it.
So tonight I’ll take what I need.
I’ll try to find the sweet spot between pain and peace. And if the numbers don’t add up tomorrow, I’ll start over again.
Because that’s what this kind of math demands — constant recalculation, constant grace, and the hope that somewhere in the mix, I’ll find a few good hours that feel like mine.
💗 Subscriber Note:
If you’ve ever stared at a row of pill bottles and wondered how this became your normal, you’re not alone. This space — Mojo and the Mess — is for all of us doing the math that no one else sees.







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