24/10/2025
Itโs โ so letโs talk about what most people ๐ฅ๐ฐ๐ฏโ๐ต see.
I live with several invisible disabilities. You wouldnโt know it just by looking at me โ and thatโs both a blessing ๐ข๐ฏ๐ฅ a curse.
Because while Iโve built two great businesses and continue to โshow upโ with joy and purpose, Iโve also encountered plenty of people โ employers, colleagues, friends, and even family โ who decided that because they couldnโt see it, it doesnโt exist.
Iโve even lost jobs because of it.
Not because I couldnโt do the work โ but because some people couldnโt see past their own assumptions and biases.
Hereโs the truth:
โญ Invisible doesnโt mean imaginary.
โญ Strong doesnโt mean โnot struggling.โ
โญ Success doesnโt mean โpain-free.โ
Yeah, I might need to do things a little differently sometimes โ I pace myself, I adapt, I find my own rhythm. But I still show up. I still get it done. Just differently. And thatโs okay.
Whatโs not okay is ignorance or bias. Itโs 2025 โ we ๐ฌ๐ฏ๐ฐ๐ธ better, so we should ๐ฅ๐ฐ better.
It costs nothing to listen, learn, and lead with empathy. It costs everything to constantly prove your worth to people who refuse to understand.
To everyone living with invisible disabilities: I see you. I get it. And Iโm proud of the strength it takes us to keep showing up and living on our own terms. ๐
To everyone else: believe people when they tell you what theyโre experiencing. You donโt need to see it to respect it.
Hereโs to awareness, compassion, and a world where kindness isnโt optional โ itโs expected.