I live in a body that rarely feels like home. Though it belongs to me, it often acts like a stranger—an unwilling companion I never chose but must carry. I hold my breath, always bracing for the moment my symptoms strike and knock me off my feet. My legs give out without warning, sending me crashing to the ground. Even though I’ve learned to expect it – another consequence of living with a disability. I still feel a quiet, persistent anger rising inside me. It simmers beneath the surface, lurking in the silence where pain waits to flare. I don’t direct my anger outward; I turn it inward, toward the body I’m supposed to trust and call home.
"I hold my breath, always bracing for the moment my symptoms strike and knock me off my feet. My legs give out without warning, sending me crashing to the ground." Share on X
Disability: My Body Is My Home – But I Don’t Feel Safe Here
My body is my home—my only permanent abode—yet I never feel safe inside it. They say the body is a temple, but mine feels more like a dilapidated house, one that is haunted by constant aches and unpredictable pain. My body moves in ways I can’t control—or it refuses to move at all. It aches quietly, collapses without warning, and spasms for no reason. It hides things from me, keeps its secrets, and exposes me in the worst ways. And it makes me vulnerable to injury, to misunderstanding, to judgment.
"My body is my home— yet I never feel safe inside it." Share on X "My body moves in ways I can't control—or it refuses to move at all. It aches quietly, collapses without warning, and spasms for no reason. It hides things from me, keeps its secrets, and exposes me in the worst ways." Share on XEvery time I stare into my mirror, I see evidence of my body’s fragility littered across my skin. As my eyes skim across every inch of my body, I notice the adornment of cuts and bruises, the inevitable fallout from the many falls and accidents from my disability.
"As my eyes skim across every inch of my body, I notice the adornment of cuts and bruises, the inevitable fallout from the many falls and accidents from my disability." Share on XEach mark on my skin tells me I’ve lost the safety of trust and predictability—the quiet confidence that my body will respond, that my strength will endure. Instead, I am bracing. I am bracing for the next moment when my body will betray me. All too aware that it will do so again, again and again. I’ve had to endure moments when my legs gave out while crossing a street, when pain surged so violently I couldn’t speak, and when fatigue blanketed me so thickly I couldn’t lift my head. Each of these moments has only carved a chasmic crack in the already fragile foundation of my self-confidence.
"I've had to endure moments when my legs gave out while crossing a street, when pain surged so violently I couldn't speak, and when fatigue blanketed me so thickly I couldn't lift my head." Share on X
But I Can’t Be Angry: I Have To Paint A Smile And Perform
Yet, I feel I’m unable to give voice to this part of my life with a disability. All because society deems it inappropriate for the chronically ill and disabled to express anger. Instead, people expect me to feel grateful for the small things and the lessons that illness can teach, be inspirational, and smile. I often feel pressured to paint a smile, brush the pain aside and find the silver linings underneath the dirt that this disability refuses to let me forget.
"I often feel pressured to paint a smile, brush the pain aside and find the silver linings underneath the dirt that this disability refuses to let me forget." Share on XWhen I do speak of my anger, people flinch. They want to hear a story of acceptance and peace, not the rage and discontent inside me. But I want both peace and acceptance; I fight for it, but my body won’t let me have it.
On the bad days, I hear cries to put on my favourite cheery pop song that makes me smile and turn the volume up loud. But as much as I want the music to drown out the sadness and anger, it’s not what I want to hear. Sometimes, I don’t need bubblegum pop’s uplifting, happy, saccharine lyrics. What I want to hear is an angry, angsty rock anthem type to listen to and emulate, and permit me to wallow in the anger that my body is betraying me.
I carry anger like ARMOUR
A bitterness creeps in whenever I hear ‘You look fine’ or ‘Think positively.’ As if my disability is a mere inconvenience, a temporary setback that I can snap out of with a positive attitude. But if they looked deeper, they could see the invisible chains that bind me, the constant battle raging within.
It’s not only the physical pain that fuels the anger but the isolation that accompanies it. The fear of explaining my condition, the exhaustion of constantly managing my pain, and the fear of being a burden to those around me weigh heavily on me every day. The anger is a shield, a way to protect myself from the well-meaning but often insensitive comments, the pitying glances, the constant need to justify my existence.
My body is betraying me. It promises me a good day and then pulls the rug from under me without warning. Yet, people speak of ‘listening to your body’ as if it’s a wise inner compass. Mine no longer feels like a strong, resilient body – it is fragile. I reject the beauty standards society taught me and recognise this form as real, twisted, bruised, slow, and silent. My body may be powerful in its own right, but that power is rarely under my control.
"My body is betraying me. It promises me a good day, then pulls the rug from under me without warning." Share on X
I feel a silent anger and rage toward it. A deep, bitter anger rises when I’m alone or tired; when I’ve had to cancel plans for the third time that week, or when I miss out on things others take for granted. The anger feels all too real; it pulses in my chest and curls in my fists. It is a grieving kind of fury – a longing for a body I will never have and the freedoms I’ve never fully known.
" It is a grieving kind of fury – a longing for a body I will never have and the freedoms I've never fully known." Share on XI carry this anger as a reminder of the battles I fight every day Because of My Disability
But I refuse to cover the pain with gratitude to make it palatable for others. I won’t smother my anger with false positivity or disguise my grief with a smile. My anger is the echo of the weight I carry because of this disability; a reminder of the battles fought inside my skin every single day.
"My anger is the echo of the weight I carry because of this disability; a reminder of the battles fought inside my skin every single day." Share on XI’m learning to accept this rage, to mourn the body I wanted, and to grieve the trust my body has broken. This anger is not the opposite of acceptance—it’s part of the process. It’s the fire that keeps me moving, breathing, and surviving.
This body may not always feel like home, but it’s still mine. I will carry the pain and fury because both are real and deserve acknowledgement.


