Two weeks. That’s how long I’ve been home. Long enough for my body to stop aching, for the bruises to fade, for my mom to stop hovering every time I stretch. Long enough to pretend I’m fine.I’m not. Every morning, I wake up and tell myself I’ll go to the rink. I even lace my skates, pack my bag, and sit in the car with the keys in my hand. But the second I picture the ice — the glare of the lights, the echo of the crowd, the sound of my blade catching — my chest tightens.Then comes the panic.It starts small, like a tremor under my ribs, then builds until I can’t breathe. My hands shake, my vision tunnels, and all I can see is the fall. The pain. The failure. The way everyone watched me break.So I don’t go.Instead, I do yoga in the living room because it makes my mom happy. I stretch, breathe, and pretend the calm helps. I go to physical therapy twice a week, smile at the therapist, and nod when she says I’m healing well. But healing isn’t the same as ready. And now my coach is he
최신 업데이트 : 2026-06-01 더 보기