Tag Archives: survival

When the World Became Poison: A Mother’s Descent into OCD and the Long Road Home

No one warns you that one day, without permission, your own mind might turn on you — not loudly, but quietly, in a whisper so small you almost miss the moment everything changes.


There are moments in a woman’s life when the world shifts so quietly that no one else sees it tilt, but she feels the ground lurch beneath her feet. Mine happened after the birth of my twins, in the soft hours of new motherhood when I was still wrapped in that fragile hope that life would settle into a storybook rhythm. Babies, love, a home, a future. I believed in that once. I believed the world was safe, that grocery aisles were harmless, that cleaning supplies were just products on a shelf and not silent threats waiting to unravel me. I believed light would always fall kindly on my life. But I was wrong, and life has a way of revealing its teeth in the most ordinary places.

It started with a whisper that didn’t belong to me. A small, trembling thought that slid into my mind one exhausted afternoon: What if I die? Who will raise my girls? A question so thin it could have been mistaken for a breeze… until it grew fangs. What if the counters were poisonous? What if the grocery store chemicals clung to my skin? What if they hurt my daughters? What if I touched something deadly and didn’t know it yet? What if, what if, what if. It became a litany. A haunting. A second heartbeat. And suddenly the world I knew — the one filled with birthday cakes and errands and bedtime stories — turned into a minefield of invisible dangers, where every step felt like an invitation to catastrophe.

I hid it well, the way women have always hidden their suffering. We learn early how to bleed without staining the carpet. Only my closest friends knew a fraction of my truth, and even they didn’t understand the full scope of the private apocalypse happening in my head. I carried my fear like a second child, quiet, needy, and always awake. If strangers knew, I was certain they’d call me crazy, drag me to an asylum, lock me in a padded room, or burn me like a witch for daring to lose my composure in a world that demands women be endlessly stable. But inside, I was cracking. Splintering. Fracturing into versions of myself I didn’t recognise.

I remember gripping shopping carts until my knuckles went white, whispering prayers under the fluorescent lights of grocery stores. I remember clinging to my husband’s arm just to walk past the cleaning aisle. I remember the way my heart galloped when I drove past stores that sold chemicals — as if the mere presence of them behind brick walls could poison the air I breathed. And yet, I kept going. Because mothers don’t get to fall apart in public. We fall apart while packing lunches, folding laundry and scheduling pediatric appointments.

Before the fear took root, I owned a small cleaning business. I loved it — the quiet satisfaction of transforming a room, the way a house felt different once it had been cared for. But one day, something shifted. I walked into a client’s home, saw a bottle of cleaner sitting on the counter, and felt the walls tilt. Not physically, but inside my skull. That was the day I realised my fear had become a creature, and it was hungry. I quit jobs I once cherished. I avoided places I once frequented. My world shrank until it was no bigger than the panic pulsing beneath my ribs.

Doctors dismissed me. They always do. I said, “Something is wrong,” and they said, “You’re just overwhelmed.” I said, “I can’t control these thoughts,” and they handed me antidepressants like consolation prizes. But I wasn’t depressed. I was terrified. There is a difference. I tried their pills for a short time, out of desperation, and felt electricity crackle under my skin — mania, agitation, thoughts that didn’t feel like my own. I knew then what I had suspected all along: the cure wasn’t in numbing the symptoms. The cure was in the root, buried so deep beneath motherhood and hormones and trauma that no one had bothered to dig.

One night, unable to sleep, I sat at my computer with a heart full of dread and a search bar full of hope. And in that lonely blue glow, I found something the medical world rarely bothers to mention: the gut-brain connection. How infections like strep can mimic psychiatric disorders. How childbirth destabilises the immune system. How thyroid dysfunction can spark anxiety that mimics madness. How postpartum upheaval can alter neurotransmitters. How women are left vulnerable, unprotected, and unheard at the exact moment they need the most care. Suddenly, the world made sense in a way it never had. Something inside me — something bruised but unbroken — woke up.

Maybe I wasn’t losing my mind.
Maybe my body was trying to speak.
Maybe no one had ever taught me its language.

As I read more, a simple but devastating truth emerged: sometimes the mind is not the villain. Sometimes the body is waving a flag, begging for help, and everyone else is too busy, too dismissive, too conditioned to look away. Women don’t fall apart because we’re fragile. We fall apart because no one listens until the damage is catastrophic.

My healing was not a miracle or a singular moment of revelation. It was a slow, weary climb from the pit where fear had kept me caged. I healed my gut. I studied my thyroid. I walked back into places that once turned my bones to water. I faced the invisible shadows that haunted me. I began to recognize that my OCD was not a random defect but a chain reaction — one lit by childbirth, thyroid imbalance, trauma, exhaustion, and a world that never once paused to ask, Are you okay?

And then something else happened — something unexpected. As I healed, I felt a purpose rise in me like dawn over ruins. If the world wasn’t going to teach women the truth about their bodies, their minds, their hormones, their trauma, their thresholds — then I would. If no one was going to give us a roadmap, then I would write the damn thing myself. This is why I became an author. This is why my books exist. This is why my blog exists. Because someone needs to say what women have been whispering for centuries: You are not crazy. You are unheard.

Writing saved me the way medicine should have.
Research steadied me the way doctors never did.
Words became the bridge between my suffering and my recovery.

And so I share this—not because it is easy, not because it is noble, but because another woman is reading this right now with her own private terror lodged in her lungs, wondering why the world suddenly feels poisonous and whether anyone will understand if she speaks. To that woman, I say: I see you. I see the shaking hands. I see the racing heart. I see the way you hide your fear behind the mask of competence. You are not broken. You are not weak. You are not alone. You are a human being with a body that has been screaming for far too long in a society that covers women’s mouths with diagnoses instead of understanding.

My healing is not complete, and perhaps it never will be. Healing is not a destination; it is a direction. But I am no longer drowning. I am navigating. I am speaking. I am writing. I am reclaiming the pieces that fear stole from me. And I will keep lighting lanterns on the path for every woman who follows. When the world became poison, I thought I was dying. But the truth is — I was awakening.

And now, I refuse to go back to sleep.


FOLLOW FOR MORE

If this story found you, stay with me. Follow for more women’s healing, trauma truth-telling, thyroid empowerment, and the stories that no one else is brave enough to say aloud.


If this found you, it was meant for you.

Follow me for more healing, truth, and fire. Share this blog.

If this blog helped you, share it — your friends, sisters, coworkers, and fellow exhausted women need this truth.

Healing happens in community. Let’s grow ours. 

Explore More From A.L. Childers:

 Official Author Website: TheHypothyroidismChick.com

 Amazon Author Page: https://www.amazon.com/author/alchilders

 Featured Books:
 Reset Your Thyroid: 21-Day Meal Plan
• A Woman’s Holistic Holy Grail Handbook for Hypothyroidism & Hashimoto’s
• The Hidden Empire: A Journey Through Millennia of Oligarchic Rule
• The Girl in the Mirror Is Thirteen Again

If you’re not following me yet… you should.

 Subscribe below and get: ( Why not? It’s FREE)

  • New blogs delivered straight to your inbox
  • Behind-the-scenes book updates
  • Early access to new releases
  • Free guides for thyroid healing, emotional wellness, and women’s empowerment
  • Exclusive content I never post publicly

This story is based on personal experience and research.
It is for educational and emotional support,
not medical advice.
Always consult a qualified healthcare provider
for diagnosis, treatment, or medication changes.


A.L. Childers is a multi-genre author, truth-teller, researcher, and wellness advocate whose work spans health, trauma, history, spirituality, empowerment, and fiction. With more than 200 published works, she writes for the women who feel unseen, unheard, and misunderstood.

A raw, powerful, memoir essay about postpartum trauma, OCD, thyroid chaos, and the moment a mother realised the world had turned into poison. A story of fear, gut-brain truth, survival, hope, and reclaiming life from the darkness.

Chapter 8: Life Between Battles

Life Between Battles

The days after their first battle passed in a haze of exhaustion and grief. The men of the Saint Patrick’s Battalion worked tirelessly to bury their dead, patch their wounds, and make sense of the lives they had just taken. For James Dawkins, the weight of what he had seen clung to him like a shadow. Every face, every cry of pain, every life lost—it was all etched into his mind, playing on a loop that no amount of distraction could silence.

As he sat near the dying embers of a campfire one evening, James opened his journal, his hands still smudged with dirt and gunpowder. Writing had become his lifeline, a way to make sense of the chaos around him. He dipped his pen into the inkwell and began to write:

“The battlefield is not what they tell you. There is no glory, no honor. Only blood and the sound of men breaking. Today, we buried our brothers. Tomorrow, we will fight again. But what I cannot forget are their faces—men who once laughed beside me now still as the earth they lie beneath. How do we go on from here?”

The Camp Comes Alive

The camp was a strange mixture of mourning and resilience. While some men drank themselves into oblivion to drown out the horrors of war, others clung to rituals and habits that reminded them of home. Samuel Price carved intricate patterns into a piece of wood; his hands steady despite the turmoil in his heart. “Keeps me grounded,” he said when James asked about it. “Gotta keep your hands busy, or your mind will eat you alive.”

Sean O’Donoghue, ever the optimist, had taken to playing his fiddle again, the haunting melodies of Ireland weaving through the camp like a thread connecting them all. Even men who weren’t Irish would gather around to listen, the music reminding them of better days and better places.

One evening, as the firelight flickered, Sean began a lively tune that brought a small smile to James’s lips. “Play something cheerful for once,” James called out, his voice thick with exhaustion but tinged with gratitude.

Sean grinned, his bow dancing across the strings. “Cheerful it is, then! But don’t blame me if it makes you miss the hills of home.”

Stories of the Fallen

It wasn’t just the living who occupied the camp. The memories of the fallen lingered like ghosts, their absence keenly felt. James found himself drawn to the stories of those who had been lost, as if keeping their memories alive was a way to honor them.

There was Patrick McGinty, a farmer’s son from Galway who had a laugh like rolling thunder. He’d been the first to volunteer when Riley called for defectors, saying, “I didn’t leave Ireland to fight for men who hate me.” His death had been swift, a musket ball to the chest, but his spirit lingered in the tales his comrades told.

And then there was Antonio Rivera, a Mexican soldier who had joined the battalion not out of faith or shared heritage, but out of a deep respect for the Irishmen who had chosen to fight for his people. Antonio had been quiet but fiercely loyal, his actions speaking louder than words.

“Antonio saved my life,” Samuel said one night, his voice low and heavy. “Took a bullet that was meant for me. Didn’t even hesitate.” He stared into the fire, his expression unreadable. “How do you repay a debt like that?”

The Weight of Letters Home

The men wrote letters when they could, though the words often felt inadequate. James poured his heart onto the page, writing to his mother with a mixture of honesty and restraint:

“Dear Mam,

I’ve seen things I never thought I’d see, and I’ve done things I’m not sure I’ll ever be able to forget. But I fight for something now, something that feels real. I think you’d understand if you were here, though I pray you never have to know what it’s like. Tell Mary and the little ones I think of them every day. Keep me in your prayers, Mam. It’s all that keeps me going sometimes.”

A Turning Point

It was during these quiet moments between battles that James began to see the battalion as more than just a group of men. They were a family, bound not by blood but by shared experience. The green flag of Erin go Bragh wasn’t just a banner—it was a symbol of their unity, their defiance, their hope.

John Riley, ever the leader, took these moments to remind the men why they fought. “This is bigger than us,” he said one evening, his voice carrying across the camp. “What we do here matters. It’s not just about Mexico, or Ireland, or even ourselves. It’s about standing up against injustice, wherever we see it. It’s about proving that the forgotten, the downtrodden, the oppressed—we are not weak. We are not powerless.”

The men listened, their eyes shining with a mixture of admiration and resolve. James felt a fire ignite in his chest; a sense of purpose that made the sacrifices feel less futile.

A Glimpse of Humanity

Despite the hardships, moments of humanity shone through. A Mexican family, their home destroyed by the war, brought food to the camp one evening—a simple meal of tortillas and beans. The woman, her face lined with worry but softened by a smile, spoke in broken English. “Gracias,” she said, her voice trembling. “You fight for us. For our children.”

James took the plate she offered, his throat tight with emotion. “We fight for more than that,” he said softly. “We fight for a world where your children don’t have to.”

Preparing for the Next Battle

As the days passed, the camp began to stir with anticipation. Another battle loomed on the horizon, and the men of the Saint Patrick’s Battalion prepared themselves. Weapons were cleaned, ammunition counted, and strategies discussed.

James felt a mixture of dread and determination. He knew what was coming—the blood, the chaos, the loss. But he also knew he wouldn’t face it alone. He had his brothers beside him, the green flag above him, and the hope that their fight would mean something.

And as the sun dipped below the horizon, casting the camp in a golden glow, James opened his journal once more. His words were steady, his resolve firm:

“We go to war again. Not as soldiers for hire, but as men who believe in something greater. We fight for faith, for justice, for the chance to prove that we are more than what they see us as. And if I fall, let it be known—I fell fighting for what I believed in.”

The next battle was coming, and James was ready.

Disclaimer

This book, James Dawkins: A Legacy of Survival, Sacrifice, and Southern Tradition, is a blend of historical research, family lore, cultural analysis, and creative storytelling. While great care has been taken to present historical events accurately, some elements—such as personal accounts, conversations, and character perspectives—are dramatized to bring the narrative to life and provide a deeper emotional connection to the events described.

The recipes and traditions included in this book are shared for cultural and educational purposes. They are drawn from personal and regional traditions, as well as historical sources, and may vary depending on individual practices and interpretations.

The author, A.L. Childers, is not a professional historian or genealogist but a passionate writer committed to exploring the cultural and historical roots of Southern experience. This book is not intended to serve as an authoritative historical text but as a celebration of heritage, resilience, and family. Readers seeking in-depth historical analysis are encouraged to consult additional scholarly sources.

The opinions and interpretations expressed in this book are those of the author and do not represent the definitive perspective on any historical or cultural topic. Readers are encouraged to explore their own family histories and cultural traditions, taking inspiration from this work to celebrate and preserve their unique stories.

James Dawkins: A Legacy of Survival, Sacrifice, and Southern Tradition

James Dawkins: A Legacy of Survival, Sacrifice, and Southern Tradition

James Dawkins: A Legacy of Survival, Sacrifice, and Southern Tradition

Step into a gripping story of resilience, survival, and Southern heritage with James Dawkins: A Legacy of Survival, Sacrifice, and Southern Tradition. This extraordinary work by A.L. Childers, the proud sixth-generation great-great-great-granddaughter of James Dawkins, takes you on an unforgettable journey through history, culture, and family legacy.

A Discovery That Changed Everything
This is not just a book—it’s the product of an extraordinary find. While researching my family’s history, I discovered James Dawkins’s journal tucked away in the attic of an abandoned home just before it was demolished for uninhabitable living conditions. Fragile and weathered, this journal became a portal to the past, revealing the life and struggles of a man whose courage and conviction shaped the destiny of our family.

Each faded page told the story of James Dawkins, an Irish immigrant who fled Ireland 10 years before the Great Hunger, embarking on a harrowing journey to America. His life unfolded through the journal’s entries: surviving the treacherous Atlantic voyage, toiling under brutal conditions, and ultimately fighting alongside the Saint Patrick’s Battalion in the U.S.-Mexican War. This wasn’t just a journal—it was a time capsule of resilience, sacrifice, and hope.

Why This Story Demands to Be Read—and Seen on the Big Screen
James Dawkins isn’t just a book; it’s a cinematic epic waiting to be told. Packed with vivid storytelling, emotional depth, and historical richness, it has all the elements of a blockbuster movie or series. Imagine the drama of his life, the raw courage of his choices, and the rich cultural backdrop of his journey—all brought to life on the silver screen.

What Makes This Book Unmissable?

  • Adventure Worthy of Hollywood: Battles, sacrifice, and the fight for freedom—this story is a historical drama for the ages.
  • Rich Southern Culture: Explore superstitions, traditions, and recipes that bring the Carolinas to life in vivid detail.
  • Universal Themes of Hope and Resilience: This is more than one man’s story—it’s a testament to the enduring power of the human spirit.

Join the Legacy
This book is a call to action. Don’t just read about history—be inspired by it. Learn how the past shapes our present and future, and let this unforgettable tale ignite your own journey of discovery. Whether you’re a history enthusiast, a fan of epic storytelling, or a producer searching for the next groundbreaking project, James Dawkins is a must-read.

Act Now
Don’t wait—this is the story the world needs to hear. Be among the first to experience the legacy of James Dawkins, a man whose courage and conviction changed the course of history. As his sixth-generation great-great-great-granddaughter, I invite you to join me in celebrating his incredible journey.

History deserves to be remembered. Stories deserve to be told. And heroes like James Dawkins deserve to be immortalized. Buy James Dawkins: A Legacy of Survival, Sacrifice, and Southern Tradition today, and be part of the legacy that inspires generations.

Perfect for readers, history buffs, adventure seekers, and Hollywood visionaries looking for the next great story to tell.

This isn’t just a book. It’s an experience. It’s a movement. It’s a legacy.

Get your copy today and be part of the story that will captivate the world.

Unlocking Carolina’s New Year’s Day: Superstitions, Traditions, and Delicious Recipes

The Southern New Year Celebration is a worldwide celebration for the beginning of the New Year. These festivals are among the oldest and the most universally observed. This book takes you on a journey of the Southern part of America, honoring North and South Carolina and sharing some of their rich history of southern superstition, tradition, and Delicious Recipes.

New Year’s Day in Carolina is a time-honored tradition that celebrates the start of a new year with family, friends, and good fortune. The day is filled with superstitions and rituals that have been passed down through generations, each believed to bring luck and prosperity in the coming year. From eating black-eyed peas and collard greens to watching the sunrise and lighting fireworks, there are countless ways to ring in the New Year in the Carolinas. Whether you’re a local or a visitor, these traditions are a must-try for anyone looking to experience the true spirit of the Carolinas. So, gather your loved ones, bring out your best recipes and enjoy a day full of joy, happiness, and good vibes!

A.L. Childers explores the rich history in southern superstition, tradition, and culture. Southerners have a strong sense of regional heritage, and this is why she believes southern food belongs to a region, not a race or ethnicity. They have not forgotten their ancestry but started creating new methods, with minimal equipment and scarce resources; using every portion of edible scraps in the home—nothing ever went to waste. Southern style food is not only about how they nurture people with every mouthful, but it tells a story of survival from each ingredient. Often passed down through the generations, the dishes detailed in this book are cherished and shared at family gatherings, holiday feasts, and community suppers throughout the seasons. My folks didn’t cook out of cookbooks much less write them- we just cooked. Southern cooking is from our soul.

Soul food is more than just a style of cooking, it tells a story of survival from each ingredient. The records of history mostly overlook the contributions made by these folks. Without property rights, the cooks lost ownership of the hybridized cuisine they created.

Disclaimer

The information and recipes in the blog are based on the author’s research and personal experiences. It’s for entertainment purpIt’s only. Every attempt has been made to provide accurate, up-to-date, and reliable information. No warranties of any kind are expressed or implied. Readers acknowledge that the author does not render legal, financial, medical, or professional advice. By reading this blog, the reader agrees that under no circumstance the author is not responsible for any direct or indirect loss incurred by using the information contained within this blog. Including but not limited to errors, omissions, or inaccuracies. This blog is not intended to replace what your healthcare provider has suggested.  The author is not responsible for any adverse effects or consequences from using any of the suggestions, preparations, or procedures discussed in this blog. All matters about your health should be supervised by a healthcare professional. I am not a doctor or a medical professional. This blog is designed as an educational and entertainment tool only. Please always check with your health practitioner before taking any vitamins, supplements, or herbs, as they may have side effects, especially when combined with medications, alcohol, or other vitamins or supplements.  Knowledge is power, educate yourself and find the answer to your healthcare needs. Wisdom is a beautiful thing to seek.  I hope this blog will teach and encourage you to take leaps in your life to educate yourself for a happier & healthier life. You have to take ownership of your health.

The views and services offered by Thehypothyroidismismchick.com are not intended to be a substitute for professional medical assistance but as an alternative for those seeking solutions for better health. We do not claim to diagnose, treat, prevent, or cure any disease but simply help you make physical and mental changes in your own body to help your body heal itself. Remember that results may vary, and if you are pregnant, nursing, taking medications, or have a severe condition, you should consult a physician or other appropriate medical professional before using any products or information on this site. Thehypothyroidisimchick.com assumes no responsibility for the use or misuse of this material. Your use of this website indicates your agreement to these terms. Our full disclosure, terms of use, and privacy policy.

The information on this site is not intended or implied to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. All content, including text, graphics, images, and information on or available through this website, is for general information purposes only. Opinions expressed here are the opinions of the writer. Never disregard professional medical advice or delay seeking medical treatment because of something you have read or accessed through this website.

This site is designed for educational purposes only and is not engaged in rendering medical advice, legal advice, or professional services. If you feel that you have a medical problem, you should seek the advice of your physician or health care practitioner. For additional information, please see Our full disclosure, terms of use, and privacy policy.

Our full disclosure, terms of use, and privacy policy. | thehypothyroidismchick

This piece was inspired by timeless wisdom and the understanding that true success lies not in the small battles, but in the pursuit of one’s purpose. –A.L. Childers

What Happens When a Mother Breaks: Gut, Brain, Chemicals & the Unseen War on Women’s Health

No one warns you that one day the ordinary world can turn hostile—stores, scents, cleaning aisles, even the air itself—until suddenly the familiar becomes venom and your own mind becomes the weapon.


There are chapters of a woman’s life that arrive quietly—without ceremony, without warning—and yet divide everything into before and after. Mine began not with catastrophe, but with a whisper: a strange new fear clinging to the edges of motherhood, tightening its grip each day until the world itself felt poisonous. I never imagined that the birth of my twins would be the doorway into a labyrinth of fear I could not name. I never imagined that one day I would stand in the grocery store, frozen, pulse racing, unable to step past the cleaning aisle because the scent of chemicals felt like death reaching for my throat. I never imagined that driving past a store could send my heart spiraling into terror or that touching a doorknob could ignite the “what if” machine that would later become the tyrant of my days.

I had always dreamed an ordinary woman’s dream—raise children, build a small business, cook meals, kiss scraped knees, and maybe someday retire with a soft blanket and a warm porch. But life does not always honor our daydreams. Sometimes it rips the ground from beneath our feet. After my twins were born, I began to lose my footing in ways I couldn’t explain. I felt the shift inside me—the tremor, the crack, the slant of the world—as if something in my body had unlatched itself and let madness seep in.

Was I crazy? The question pulsed through me day and night. My thoughts were not my own. They swarmed around me like bees, stinging every quiet moment with panic. What if I die? Who will raise my girls? What if they touched poison? What if I touched poison? What if this kills us? What if? What if? What if?

It felt like falling into a well with no bottom. And the strangest part? I looked “fine.” I functioned. I smiled. I hid the chaos so well that even my closest friends never fully understood the hell I was living inside.

The world would have gladly labeled me crazy if they knew. Some would have treated me like a witch from another century—stoned, burned, or locked in a padded room if society still allowed it. Others would have slapped a diagnosis on me with the ease of signing a receipt. Doctors offered pills like consolation prizes—antidepressants, antipsychotics, “it’s all in your head” medications—without ever asking why my life had collapsed in the first place.

But something in me refused the quick fix. I felt it in my soul that many of these doctors were only placing a bandage on a bullet wound. They treated the symptom, never the woman. They medicated the smoke but never searched for the fire.

It was motherhood that broke me, yes—but it was also motherhood that made me fight.

In those years I lived in constant fight-or-flight. I cleaned homes for work—me, the woman terrified of chemicals, scrubbing strangers’ kitchens while my heart galloped inside my chest. I would flee jobs I loved because a single bottle of cleaner left out in the open could send my body into a spiral. I would quit opportunities. I would abandon dreams. The world became a maze of dangers and I was trapped inside my own skin.

My only relief came in sips of beer or in the rare Xanax a doctor reluctantly prescribed. And still, I wondered—Why is this happening to me? Why now? Why after childbirth? Why after the diagnosis of hypothyroidism? Why after autoimmune symptoms began to bloom beneath my skin like dark flowers? What broke inside me that I cannot seem to mend?

My salvation came in the most unexpected place—research.

I read late into the night, long after the children slept, searching for clues like a detective desperate to solve her own mystery. My hands shook the first time I read Dr. Mercola’s article on the gut–brain connection and the hidden role of streptococcus and autoimmune chaos in psychiatric disorders like OCD.

Could my mind’s unraveling be the echo of something biological—something happening in the gut rather than the soul? Could childbirth, thyroid dysfunction, infections, toxins, inflammation, and our modern chemical-soaked world all collide in ways doctors refused to acknowledge?

And as I looked around—at the poisoned water, the pesticide-bathed food, the polluted air, the chemical-filled shots and medications—I realized something:

Of course women are sick.
Of course our immune systems are collapsing.
Of course our minds are breaking.

We are living inside a double-edged sword—fed toxins on one side and medicated for the consequences on the other.

The gut, I learned, is not merely a digestive organ. It is a second brain. It makes more serotonin than the brain in your skull. It houses trillions of bacteria that shape mood, thought, hormones, immunity, and survival itself. When the gut breaks, the mind follows. When the gut inflames, the spirit trembles. When the gut leaks, fear leaks with it.

And slowly, painfully, piece by piece—my story began to make sense.

I discovered choline sensitivity. Serotonin deficiencies. Thyroid imbalances. Autoimmune triggers. I learned that the body keeps score in ways far older than language, far deeper than psychology. I learned how chemicals, trauma, hormones, and pregnancy can ignite a wildfire in the brain.

I learned that OCD, for me, wasn’t insanity.
It was injury.
It was inflammation.
It was survival misfiring in the dark.

And perhaps most importantly—I learned that I was not alone.

So I began writing. Books. Recipes. Blogs. Essays. Notes. I wrote because writing was the only way I knew to stitch myself back together. I wrote because the world was too silent about what women endure. I wrote because food became medicine again—bone broth, minerals, fats, herbs, ferments. I wrote because Hippocrates was right: Let food be thy medicine and medicine be thy food.

And now I write this—this sprawling tale of madness and meaning—because someone else out there is quietly falling apart and believing she is the only one.

You are not alone.

Your body is talking.
Your fear has roots.
Your healing has a beginning.

And this moment—right here, right now—
is a moment in time that cannot be erased.
Because you lived it. Because I lived it. Because we are here, reading these words together.

Healing begins with awareness. It grows with questioning. It deepens with rewriting the stories we were told about ourselves. It expands with courage. And it becomes real when we stop hiding.

This is my story.
This is my offering.
This is my moment in time.

And now—maybe—it becomes yours too.


FOLLOW FOR MORE

If this resonated, follow me for more truth-telling, trauma healing, thyroid wisdom, autoimmune insights, women’s stories, and powerful emotional medicine.



If this found you, it was meant for you.

Follow me for more healing, truth, and fire. Share this blog.

If this blog helped you, share it — your friends, sisters, coworkers, and fellow exhausted women need this truth.

Healing happens in community. Let’s grow ours. 

Explore More From A.L. Childers:

 Official Author Website: TheHypothyroidismChick.com

 Amazon Author Page: https://www.amazon.com/author/alchilders

 Featured Books:
 Reset Your Thyroid: 21-Day Meal Plan
• A Woman’s Holistic Holy Grail Handbook for Hypothyroidism & Hashimoto’s
• The Hidden Empire: A Journey Through Millennia of Oligarchic Rule
• The Girl in the Mirror Is Thirteen Again

If you’re not following me yet… you should.

 Subscribe below and get: ( Why not? It’s FREE)

  • New blogs delivered straight to your inbox
  • Behind-the-scenes book updates
  • Early access to new releases
  • Free guides for thyroid healing, emotional wellness, and women’s empowerment
  • Exclusive content I never post publicly

This story is based on personal experience and research.
It is for educational and emotional support,
not medical advice.
Always consult a qualified healthcare provider
for diagnosis, treatment, or medication changes.



AUTHOR BIO —

A.L. Childers is a bestselling author, researcher, and advocate for women’s health, specializing in thyroid disease, autoimmune dysfunction, trauma recovery, and emotional healing. She is the creator of TheHypothyroidismChick.com, where her research-based insights and raw storytelling empower women to reclaim their health. Author of A Survivor’s Cookbook Guide to Kicking Hypothyroidism’s Booty, Reset Your Thyroid, Hypothyroidism Clarity, and many others, she blends science, soul, and survival into every word she writes.


DISCLAIMER

This blog is for educational and entertainment purposes only and reflects the personal experiences and research of the author. It is not medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare provider before making changes to medication, diet, supplements, or treatment. The author assumes no liability for decisions made based on this content. By reading this blog, you agree to these terms.


13263952_10209551660887161_2954231304874132931_n