Sometimes it feels like everything arrived too late for me.

The diagnosis.
The treatment.
The understanding.
Even disability support.

By the time answers finally showed up, years of damage had already stacked up—quietly, cumulatively, like interest on a debt I never agreed to.

That’s the strange position I keep landing in: being right and being early—early enough that the system wasn’t ready to hear it yet.

So instead of receiving help, I had to become the advocate.

I wrote filings.
I submitted complaints.
I documented everything.
I pushed back when records were wrong.
I sent letters when institutions went silent.

None of it was glamorous. Most of it wasn’t public. And almost all of it was exhausting.


And here’s the part people rarely understand unless they’ve lived it:

It’s hard to watch yourself be ignored in real time. Not “missed.” Not “overlooked by accident.” I mean the specific, cold experience of being present—being clear—being documented—and still watching people act like you’re not there.

Sometimes it’s a meeting where everyone nods, then moves on like you never spoke. Sometimes it’s an email thread where your questions get answered everywhere except the actual questions. Sometimes it’s a clinic visit where the facts are in the chart, the evidence is in the record, and the conclusion is still whatever is most convenient for the system that day.

It does something to you. It makes you second-guess your own reality. It makes you feel like you have to become louder, sharper, more prepared—just to earn the basic human courtesy of being taken seriously.

And the exhausting truth is: I didn’t want to become a professional “proof-provider.” I wanted care. I wanted accuracy. I wanted to be treated like a human being, not a problem file that keeps getting kicked down the road.


But something happened along the way—something I didn’t expect.

Slowly, quietly, I started noticing shifts.

Policies started changing.
People asked better questions.
Providers took certain symptoms more seriously.
The tone in local healthcare settings began to evolve.

Places like Northern Regional Hospital—and other institutions around here—seem to treat complex medical cases a little differently now than they did years ago.

That matters.

Not because it fixes what already happened to me.

But because it might prevent someone else from being chewed up by the same machine.


And that’s the complicated part of being “the first.”

When you’re the first person pushing on a system, the doors rarely open for you.
They open for the people who come after.

I’m proud that I stood my ground. I’m proud I documented things when it would’ve been easier to disappear, to move on, to stop caring.

But I’d be lying if I said it didn’t take a toll.

Even now, I’m not always treated the way I should be. There are still moments that make me wonder whether I belong in the very places where these experiences happened—like the building remembers a version of me that was never true.

Sometimes it makes me want to leave entirely and start fresh somewhere new.

But I can’t ignore what I’ve already seen:

Systems can change.

They just move painfully slowly.
And sometimes the people who push the change don’t get to benefit from it.

Still—the work matters.

Because every system that improves, even a little, means the next person might not have to fight quite as hard.

And if that’s the role I ended up playing…

Then at least something good came from it.


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