I’m going into round two after being extremely sick for a week, and I don’t feel strong.
Not emotionally. Not physically. Not in that vague “I can do hard things” way people like to say.
I feel like I’m showing up already tired. Like my body hasn’t finished recovering from one thing before being asked to take on another.
The flu knocked me down hard. Not the kind of sick where you rest for a couple days and bounce back — the kind that leaves your body feeling hollowed out. Weak. Thin. Like whatever reserves you had are gone. And now the calendar says it’s time for treatment again, as if bodies reset on schedule.
People say things like, “At least you’re better now,” but better isn’t the right word. I’m not actively sick anymore. That’s different. There’s a gap between being cleared and being capable, and I’m standing right in it.
Going into round two feels heavier because my body remembers. It remembers the last time. It remembers how hard the days got. It remembers what it costs. And when you’re already worn down, fear shows up louder. More convincing. More specific.
There’s this quiet panic that creeps in when you realize you don’t feel ready — not because you don’t want to do it, but because you don’t know if you have what it takes right now. Strength feels like a currency I already spent just trying to get through being sick.
No one really prepares you for this part: walking into treatment already depleted. Already fragile. Already asking your body to do something difficult when it’s barely caught its breath.
Strength, when you’re sick, gets misdefined. People imagine it as confidence. As resolve. As showing up unshaken. But that’s not what this feels like.
Strength right now looks like attendance.
Not performance.
Not optimism.
Just showing up unsure and staying anyway.
I’m going into round two without feeling ready.
Without feeling strong.
Without feeling brave.
I’m going because this is what comes next — not because I feel capable, but because stopping isn’t an option. Because sometimes survival isn’t powered by strength at all, just momentum and necessity.
If you’re reading this from that same worn-down place — coming off an illness, exhausted, scared, and already empty — you’re not failing treatment. You’re not behind. You’re not weak.
You’re just human inside something that asks too much, too often.
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