Tomorrow Is My Surgery
Tomorrow is my surgery.
I wrote those words on a piece of paper because sometimes, it is easier to hold your feelings in your hands than inside your heart.
My name is Sofia. I am not like other girls my age. When I look in the mirror, I don’t always recognize the face looking back at me. My skin is swollen, my eyes are tired, and the tubes that help me breathe remind me every second that my life is different.
But I was not always like this.
When I was younger, I loved to run outside. I chased butterflies in the garden, laughed loudly, and believed that the world was a big, kind place. My mom used to sit on the porch and watch me, smiling like nothing could ever hurt us.
Then, one day, everything changed.
It started small. I felt tired all the time. My face began to swell, and my body didn’t feel like it belonged to me anymore. Doctors became a part of my life. Hospitals replaced playgrounds. Needles, machines, and quiet waiting rooms became my new normal.
At first, I was scared.
I didn’t understand why this was happening to me. I remember asking my mom, “Did I do something wrong?” She held my face gently and said, “No, my love. Life just chose a harder path for you. But you are strong enough to walk it.”
There were many nights when I cried without making a sound. I didn’t want my mom to hear. She was already carrying so much. I could see it in her eyes—the worry, the fear, the helplessness. But every morning, she still smiled for me. She always stood behind me, just like in this photo, holding my shoulders as if she could carry my pain away.
We didn’t have much. Money was always a problem. Every treatment, every visit, every test—it all felt like climbing a mountain with no end. Sometimes we had to choose between things people usually never think twice about.
But we kept going.
Because hope is a strange thing.
Even when everything feels broken, it whispers, “Try one more time.”
Tomorrow is not just another day.
Tomorrow is the result of years of waiting. Years of fear, pain, and quiet prayers. Countless doctor visits. Endless nights of uncertainty. Moments when we almost gave up—but didn’t.
This surgery… it is not just a procedure.
It is a chance.
A chance to breathe better.
A chance to feel lighter.
A chance to live without pain controlling every moment.
Maybe even… a chance to feel normal again.
I am scared. I won’t lie.
The idea of going into that room, of closing my eyes and not knowing what will happen—it makes my heart beat fast. What if something goes wrong? What if I don’t wake up the same?
But then I think about everything I have already survived.
And I realize…
I am stronger than my fear.
Tonight, I will sit with my mom. We won’t talk much. We don’t need to. Our silence understands everything. She will hold my hand like she always does, and I will feel safe, even if just for a moment.
Tomorrow, I will walk into that room not as a victim, but as a fighter.
Not because I am not afraid,
but because I choose hope anyway.
If you are reading this, I have only one thing to ask:
Please wish me luck.
Not just for the surgery…
but for the life waiting for me on the other side.
Because I am ready.
Ready to heal.
Ready to smile again.
Ready to live.
🙏✨