Don’t Tell Me I’m “Too Sensitive.” You’re Just Too Cruel.

It happened in front of a Starbucks. Like so many little violences do. I was inching my car into a disabled bay, my legs trembling, fatigue coiled behind my eyes like a migraine ready to strike, when a woman dripping in costume jewellery appeared. Finger raised. Voice already sharp with judgment.

“You can’t park there.”

I told her I could. That I had a permit and that I have multiple sclerosis.

She scoffed. “Those things are fake. You can buy them anywhere.”

“Really?” I thought to myself, “Where?” Probably would’ve been easier.


Then she looked me in the face and said: “Multiple Sclerosis doesn’t count.”

Let me repeat that. Multiple Sclerosis doesn’t **ing count.

Well, clearly I need to have a little chat with my world-class neurologist. Obviously, this woman knew something he didn’t.

I wish I had a clever comeback. Something surgical and savage that would’ve left her sizzling in a puddle of her own ignorance.

But I didn’t.

I just stood there, vibrating with rage, with shame of her making a scene in public, of her filming me on her phone, with that old, sick feeling in my gut: Here we go again.


My nervous system wasn’t built for public debate. And yet, here I was. My body on trial in the middle of town. I just wanted a coffee and to sit down because getting out in the world is an ENORMOUS treat for me these days.

The Price of Looking “Fine”

When I was first diagnosed, the man I was dating didn’t believe me.

“You’re not actually sick,” he said. “You look fine.”

As if illness only counts if it disfigures you. As if I must drag a wound behind me like a Victorian ghost to be believed.

He cheated on me with two of my friends and later dated a woman with a more obvious illness. I did start to question if he had some kind of bizarre fetish or if he just needed to feel more masculine by having a damsel in distress on his flabby arm. Who knows, people are weird. Once, with godlike certainty, he said: “Maybe you just don’t get to have love.”

I didn’t believe him; I’m not that messed up. But that’s what the world teaches you when your illness hides under your skin. That, unless your pain is public, photogenic, and can make people tilt their heads with an “oh, you poor thing” look, it doesn’t count.

That your nervous system, your actual lived experience, is somehow up for peer review.

Welcome to the Performance of “Okay”

Women are taught from the beginning to make pain look pretty. Smiling through cramps. Working through grief. Performing resilience like it’s an effing TED Talk.

Throw chronic illness into the mix, and you’re cast in a very specific role:

  • Be brave, but not bitter.
  • Be strong, but not messy.
  • Be informative, but not angry.
  • Be disabled, but not inconvenient.

God forbid you feel things.
God forbid your body doesn’t cooperate.

The Ableism Hidden in Wellness Culture

Let’s talk about the billion-dollar lie that says you can “heal yourself” if you try hard enough.

  • Green juice.
  • Yoga.
  • Mindset.
  • Detoxes.
  • Energy work.

The whole “optimise your nervous system” cult that pretends trauma and illness are just bad habits you haven’t outgrown yet.

I’m not knocking genuine care or ritual or pleasure; I love a magnesium bath as much as the next exhausted woman. But I am calling out the violence that happens when the wellness world gaslights the sick. When it blames you for your symptoms. When it markets recovery as a brand you can buy if you hustle hard enough and stop being “negative.”

Sometimes a body is just broken. Sometimes it’s just tired. Sometimes it’s never going to be better, and that doesn’t mean you failed. It means the system did.

I Don’t Owe You My Pain Performance

I don’t owe you visible suffering.
I don’t owe you explanations.
I don’t owe you a limp, a wheelchair, a medical file, or a teary TEDx talk.

I have MS. It’s real. And whether I’m collapsed in bed or laughing at a party or, God forbid, standing tall in a disabled parking space, I’m still sick. I’m still fighting. And I’m still not here to make you comfortable.

Stop asking women to shrink their pain into something you can digest.

Stop calling us “too sensitive” when what you mean is, “I don’t want to feel implicated in your reality.”

My nervous system is not a fucking debate club. It’s not up for peer review.
It’s mine. It’s sacred. And sometimes it hurts like hell.

And Still, I Rise. Not to Inspire You. To Save Myself.

The best part? That ex who told me I didn’t get to have love? He was wrong. So wrong it’s almost funny. I found someone who didn’t need proof to believe me. Who didn’t treat my illness like an inconvenience or a prop. Who holds space when my legs fail and holds my hand when they don’t.

What About You?

Have you ever been asked to prove your pain?
Have you swallowed your symptoms to make others more comfortable?
What would it feel like to stop performing and just… be?

You don’t owe anyone your broken parts.
But if you feel like sharing, I’m listening.

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