Thursday, 14 August 2025

The Year We Finally Did Our Annual Blood Test (And Why I’m Glad We Did)


So, a few years back, my husband and I had this brilliant grown-up idea:
“Let’s do an annual blood test together! You know, to monitor our health like responsible adults.”

It sounded so simple and mature. Except... we never actually did it.


Every year, it became a sort of running joke. I’d say, “Shall we go this month?” and my husband—usually while staring lovingly into his coffee—would say, “Next month, dear. This month is a bit busy.” And of course, I didn’t want to go alone. Partly because it felt less scary with him, but also because I imagined us sipping tea afterward, going over the results like two doctors on a medical drama. The more, the merrier, right?


Finally, this year, we did it. We made an appointment, fasted the night before, 8 hours of sleep, and walked into the lab hand in hand, and our 3 children. Honestly, I felt oddly excited. Like we were on a quirky date, except instead of dessert, we got our veins poked.


Now, if you’ve been following my blog, you’ll know I started my healthy lifestyle journey in 2023. I became that woman who actually drinks water (a lot!), watches her sugar, and even gasp loves weight lifting. My BMI? Finally in the healthy range. My energy? Up! My mental health? So much better.


So yes, I was feeling rather smug about the blood test. I thought, “They’ll probably want to frame my results on the wall.”


And the verdict?


Mostly good. My cholesterol? Normal. My kidneys and liver? Doing their jobs like pros. But—and there’s always a but—my blood sugar was borderline. Officially, I’m pre-diabetic. And my uric acid? Slightly above the normal range. The doctor wasn’t alarmed, but gently reminded me that even with a healthy routine, there’s always room to do more.


At first, I’ll admit, I felt a bit deflated. After all that effort, after choosing oats over cake and going on sunrise walks instead of extra sleep, it was still... not perfect. But then it hit me:


This is exactly why we do annual blood tests.


Not because we want gold stars from the lab, but because prevention matters. Knowing your numbers means you can adjust before something becomes dangerous. It’s not about being perfect; it’s about staying proactive. No matter how much good our looks, how many weights we can lift. That is not the ultimate measurement of health.


And doing it together? That made it even better. My husband and I sat with our printouts, comparing notes like two nerds in love. We even planned small changes together—like we skipped breakfast and less rice during dinner (which, I confess, he likes more than I do).


Reflecting on this, I realised something important:


Healthy living isn’t a finish line; it’s a lifelong partnership—with yourself and, if you’re lucky, with someone who’ll hold your hand through fasting blood draws at 8 a.m.


So if you’re reading this, wondering if it’s time for your annual health check, let me say: do it. Bring a friend, a partner, or your sibling and maybe your kids. It will be fun. Turn it into something positive rather than something scary. Because catching small issues early is the best kind of self-care there is.


And as for me? I’m doubling down on water, movement, and joy. Because health isn’t only about numbers—it’s about how we feel, live, and love.




To strength, sweat, and showing up every day —

Finding power in motherhood and muscle

Thursday, 7 August 2025

The Morning I Overslept... and Witnessed a Big Brother Moment




My weekday usually starts at 5 a.m. Like clockwork, my alarm sings its obnoxious little tune and I zombie-crawl out of bed, regretting every single episode I watched the night before. But hey, Monday to Friday, that’s life. The only exception? Weekends. On Saturdays and Sundays, I let myself sleep in. Not like, teenager-sleep-in—but until a glorious 7 or 8 a.m., which, for moms, is basically noon.

Now, here’s the twist. My husband? He’s always up before me. Yes, ladies and gentlemen, I married a man who voluntarily wakes up to cook breakfast. By 7 a.m., you’ll hear the gentle hum of the kitchen fan and the chop-chop-chop of onions being expertly diced. The smell of garlic? That’s the unofficial alarm clock in our house.

Typically, I roll out of bed just in time to catch him finishing the fried noodles. Then it’s my turn to take the parenting baton and serve the kids their breakfast. It’s a well-rehearsed routine—he cooks, I plate, we both survive.

But last Saturday... something magical happened.

I’d had a headache the night before and clearly didn’t hear my alarm. When I finally stirred, it felt like I had bricks in my skull. I lay there, trying to will my body upright. My limbs were on strike, and my brain was sipping coffee somewhere without me. Ten full minutes later, I managed to peel myself off the bed.

I walked into the kitchen, expecting the usual chaos: hungry kids asking, “Where’s breakfast?” and my husband still frying eggs or something. But instead, I saw him.

Our eldest.

He stood at the dining table, carefully scooping noodles onto three plates. One for each of his younger siblings. His little brothers were already seated, patiently waiting—hands folded, eyes wide, not a single “I’m hungry!” in sight. It was like watching a mini parent in action. I blinked, just to make sure I wasn’t hallucinating from lack of sleep.

My husband was there too—cleaning the stove, looking just as stunned and misty-eyed as I was.

“He just started doing it,” he whispered, as if saying it louder would break the spell.

That moment right there? Pure gold. The kind of moment parenting books don’t prepare you for. The kind that sneaks up between ordinary routines and makes you cry into your coffee.

Because here’s the thing: parenting is often about showing up. Day in, day out. Cooking, cleaning, disciplining, loving. You don’t always get a round of applause. Sometimes, you just get sticky fingers and loads of laundry. But then—you get a morning like this.

A moment when your child, the one who once needed help putting on his socks, steps up without being asked. A moment that says, “I’ve been watching. I’ve learned. I’m ready to help.”

It made me realize that children become responsible when we model responsibility, and that all those mornings of quietly serving them breakfast were never just about food. They were lessons. And our eldest? He was paying attention all along.

So, to all the tired moms out there dragging themselves through their morning routines—hang in there. You’re planting seeds that bloom when you least expect it.

And if you ever need proof that the little things matter… well, just oversleep once in a while. You might be surprised by the magic you wake up to.



To strength, sweat, and showing up every day —

Finding power in motherhood and muscle