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When Success Meant Being Too Tired to Enjoy It
For a long time, I thought success in law would feel like arrival — like satisfaction that spread across my day. Instead, it felt like exhaustion that followed me home, into weekends, into conversations,…
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The Moment Winning Started to Feel Hollow
I learned early that victory in law comes with applause and exhalation, but over time the exhalation became longer than the applause. Winning didn’t feel like justice or progress anymore. It just felt like…
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When I Realized My Law Degree Cost More Than Money
I thought I was paying for a future. For doors that would open, for status, for certainty. But it came with something I never calculated: the cost to myself, to my relationships, to the…
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How Silence Filled the Gap Between Me and Others
When words kept failing, silence stepped in. It wasn’t chosen for comfort — it was what remained when explanation stopped working.
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When Care Becomes the Weight You Carry
This pillar explores what it means to carry the emotional toll of caregiving from the inside out — when presence turns into pressure, when laughter fades, and when rest doesn’t feel like yours anymore.…
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When I Couldn’t Remember the Last Time I Laughed for Real
It wasn’t that I never smiled or made jokes. I still did. But there came a moment where I realized I couldn’t remember the last time laughter felt unforced — the kind that rises…