Nine months after surviving a catastrophic car accident and losing her leg, Jean shares the hidden reality of trauma, grief, anger, and rebuilding a life that will never be the same. A deeply honest reflection on survival, healing, and what comes after simply staying alive. People like to say, “But you survived.” They say it like it’s the end of the sentence. Like survival wraps everything up neatly with a bow. It doesn’t. I survived my accident. I also lost my leg. And those two truths exist at the same time. Survival isn’t a finish line. It’s the beginning of a long, quiet aftermath that no one prepares you for. The part where the adrenaline fades, the visitors go home, and you’re left alone in your body at night — in pain, awake, thinking. That’s where grief lives. Not the dramatic kind. The relentless kind. The kind that shows up when you can’t get comfortable in bed. When nerve pain lights up your body. When you realize your future won’t look the way you planned...
I didn’t set out to question everything I believed—I set out to understand why I felt so heavy. Why I felt stuck, why I carried the weight of the world in my body, and why rest never seemed to touch an exhaustion that went deeper than physical fatigue. I’m a deep thinker and a deep feeler, an empath who absorbs people, environments, energy, and emotion—often without realizing it. For most of my life, I didn’t have language for that experience. I only had rules. Those rules were shaped early by Catholicism: guilt, shame, sin, hellfire—the idea that something was fundamentally wrong with me, even as a child. At home, a different but familiar system reinforced it: blame. Everything was my fault. Sometimes it was, but more often it wasn’t. Still, I learned that it was safer to take responsibility than to question the chaos around me. If I owned the blame, maybe I could prevent escalation. Maybe I could stay safe. And so a pattern formed: if something is wrong, it must be me. That beli...