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The Switchback Path to Healing: Mental Health, Setbacks, and Showing Up

Posted on May 1, 2025April 28, 2025 by Laura Caldwell

There are days when the sun touches everything just right—when the trail calls your name, and the weight in your chest feels a little lighter. And then there are the other days. The ones where just brushing your teeth feels like summiting Everest, and the thought of showing up—anywhere, for anything—feels impossible.

If that’s you today, you’re not alone.

We talk a lot about healing like it’s a straight path. That once you get a diagnosis, or start therapy, or find the right medication, everything just starts climbing upward. But the truth is, mental health isn’t linear. It’s a winding trail, full of switchbacks, mud pits, unexpected storms, and moments where you lose the trail altogether.

And still—we show up.

The Myth of Constant Progress

Progress in mental health isn’t a checklist. It’s not always measurable, and it sure as hell isn’t tidy. One week, you’re crushing early morning hikes and calling friends back. The next, you might find yourself back in bed at 2 p.m., wondering what happened to that motivation.

But just because you’re struggling doesn’t mean you’re failing.

Showing up looks different every day. Sometimes it’s lacing your boots and getting a few miles in. Other times, it’s just drinking water, or texting your therapist, or resisting the urge to isolate. These aren’t small things. They’re monumental. They’re proof that, even on the hard days, you’re still choosing to stay in the fight.

The Power of Tiny Acts

When I was deep in my own fog, after finally receiving my Bipolar II diagnosis, there were days I didn’t recognize myself. I was either racing with energy or stuck to the floor. I thought healing would be a straight sprint toward peace. Instead, I found myself inching forward, sideways, and sometimes backwards.

But I started counting my tiny victories:

  • I made coffee, even though I didn’t want to.
  • I took a shower after three days of not.
  • I went outside and let the sun touch my skin.
  • I told a friend I wasn’t okay.

These things might not look like much on the outside—but if you’ve been there, you know. Sometimes, that one tiny act is everything.

Permission to Be Where You Are

If no one’s told you today, here it is:

You are allowed to not be okay.
You are allowed to be messy.
You are allowed to have days where you show up exactly as you are, no gold stars, no filter, no performance.

Healing is not about perfection. It’s about honesty. It’s about facing yourself in the mirror on the hard days and still deciding to try—whatever “trying” looks like.

The Trail Isn’t Always Beautiful

I think a lot about the Appalachian Trail—how some of the hardest, ugliest days have taught me the most. The moments I didn’t know if I could keep going, my body screaming at me to stop.

But I pressed on—one step at a time.

Even the worst days on trail are still part of the journey. And the same is true with mental health. The hard days matter. They count. And they don’t erase the good.

Showing Up Is Brave

You don’t have to pretend it’s easy.
You don’t have to carry it alone.
You just have to keep showing up—one messy, beautiful, painful, real day at a time.

That is courage. That is progress. That is healing.

Even when it doesn’t look like it.

You’re still here. That means something. That means everything.

If today feels hard, take it slow. Drink some water. Go outside for a few minutes. Text someone safe. Let this be your reminder: you don’t need to climb the whole mountain today. You just need to take the next step.

That’s what showing up looks like.

And it’s more than enough.

  • bipolar 2 recovery
  • emotional resilience
  • mental health and nature
  • mental health awareness
  • mental health journey
  • mental health recovery
  • overcoming setbacks
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