We planned a short trip, nothing extravagant, just a few slow days in France before the school year began, and in my mind I had already romanticized it into something soft and lovely. I pictured quiet mornings, decent coffee, warm light falling over sleepy villages, that sort of comforting pause where everything feels a little more manageable.
What I did not expect was cardio. Certainly not that
Because this time, for the first time, my daughter needed a wheelchair.
And suddenly, cities looked different. Every slope became a task to calculate and every cobblestone turned into a reason to hold my breath. Those charming narrow alleyways that show up on postcards felt more like traps than treasures. Beauty was still there, yes, but layered under logistics, and behind every movement was a quiet kind of mental math always planning the next three steps. It was quite different in my head.
What I noticed more than anything was how much of the world is built for people who walk without thinking. I began to see through a different lens, one where sitting too long is not restful but painful, and where exploring a new town is not just a joy but a risk. You do not just search for pretty villages anymore, you search for smooth pavements, nearby pharmacies, and accessible everything.
What carried me through was not a perfectly organized itinerary or a brave face. It was my brain’s ability to shift quickly without shutting down. That internal flexibility, that quiet rewiring, kept me upright. I kept thinking about how incredible it is that the brain can do that. That it does not need everything to stay the same in order to keep going.
That, I have learned, is neuroplasticity, and I felt grateful for it with every corner we turned.
The brain does not freeze in chaos, it moves with it
Neuroplasticity sounds like a science term you would read in a research paper or hear in a podcast, but in real life, it feels like something much more tender and essential.
It is what helps us adapt when life flips the script. It is why you can be crying in a parking lot one minute and laughing with someone the next, not because things are okay, but because your system is trying to keep you afloat. It is how we move from saying this is not what I planned to what does she need right now and mean it without hesitation.
For me, that shift happened constantly. From hopeful mornings to tired afternoons. From daydreams of cafés to hours spent navigating medication lists. From let’s see everything to let’s just get her to rest. Each of those pivots felt like a small inner rewiring. Not because I am made of steel, but because the brain is designed to stretch when it needs to.
That quiet stretching is what kept me going. The realization that you do not need to be unshakeable to keep showing up. You just need to keep bending, keep adjusting, keep responding.
The more I notice that truth, the more I rely on it. And the more I understand that our ability to change is not weakness. It is survival. It is grace in motion.
From sleepy cafés to sharp fluorescent lights
We came back from France feeling like we had some kind of rhythm. The wheelchair worked. School was about to start. We had a loose plan. It was not perfect, but it gave us a little sense of direction.
Then, within a day, everything shifted again.
My daughter lost feeling in her leg.
There was no slow decline, no moment to prepare. One minute she could feel her foot. The next, she could not.
We ended up in the neurology unit of the hospital, surrounded by tests and monitors and serious conversations that felt like they belonged to someone else’s life. The scans confirmed it. The nerve was damaged. Not just irritated, but truly affected.
The good news, if you can call it that, was that the nerve was not dying. But the reality was still heavy. This journey just became more complex, and none of us got a chance to catch our breath before it happened.
She is now under the care of a neurology team. School happens when she can manage it. Most days are filled with appointments, blood draws, assessments, and the small, sacred windows in between where we just sit and be.
Right now, we move by the hour. That is the pace that fits. That is what makes sense.
I have always believed that life does not wait for your permission to change. It just changes. But it does give you something in return. The chance to respond with as much presence as you can
Being strong does not mean being still
People often tell me I am strong, and I understand why they say it, but that is not how I experience it from the inside.
What I feel is not strength in the traditional sense. It is not stoicism or control. It is presence. Not shiny or graceful or pretty, but real and raw and grounded in the moment.
Being strong, for me, means making tea while crying into your sleeve. It means laughing when everything feels too much because your nervous system is waving a little flag saying “please let me out.” It means showing up again and again even though you know you cannot fix everything. It means being soft in a world that keeps asking you to be hard.
The nervous system craves rhythm. It wants the comfort of repetition and pattern. But when life offers none of that, you have to become the rhythm. You have to create the steady beat in your breath, in your words, in your presence. That becomes the anchor. That becomes the message you send to the people around you, and to yourself.
We are still here. We are not giving up.
You do not have to be okay to keep moving
We are still adjusting. Still learning how to live inside this new shape.
The picture keeps changing, but the focus stays the same. One moment at a time.
Some hours feel light and manageable. Others hit like a wave. Some feel like standing still in the middle of a storm with nothing to hold onto. But even on those days, we are still moving.
And in the middle of all this, I keep noticing how powerful the brain truly is. Not because it makes life easy. Not because it fixes the hard parts. But because it lets us live through what we once thought we could not survive.
So no, life did not hand us what we hoped for. But I am starting to believe that what we were given still holds meaning.
Maybe love is not about returning to what once was. Maybe it is about learning how to walk forward with what is, one breath at a time.