Vaccines didn’t suddenly become controversial—people just stopped remembering what disease actually looks like. A blunt look at misinformation, military readiness, and why the flu shot still matters.
Vaccines didn’t suddenly become controversial—people just stopped remembering what disease actually looks like. A blunt look at misinformation, military readiness, and why the flu shot still matters.
Aging doesn’t arrive all at once—it shows up in quiet limitations, hard-earned perspective, and the realization that energy is finite. From spoon theory to stubborn independence, this is what it looks like to keep moving forward anyway.
We don’t romanticize disease—we romanticize surviving it. And that difference matters more than people want to admit.
We’ve turned childhood diseases into nostalgia and vaccines into controversy. As a healthcare provider, I’ve seen what these illnesses actually do—and it’s nothing worth celebrating.