Michael Jordan playing the NBA Finals with food poisoning. He can barely stand. He is visibly herido. But he scores 38 points. Walking off the court, collapsing into Pippen’s arms—that is the definition of "aun caminando."
(Visual: 4K pan across the same road from the opening shot. But now it is morning. Golden light. The figure is gone. But in the dust, there are footprints. Not one set—many. Leading forward. Disappearing into the light.)
Closing Text (centered, white on black):
Herido pero aun caminando.
No se trata de sanar para caminar. Se trata de caminar para sanar.
Sigue. Aunque duela. Sigue. Aunque solo. Sigue.
(Wounded but still walking.
It is not about healing in order to walk. It is about walking in order to heal.
Keep going. Even if it hurts. Keep going. Even if you're alone. Keep going.)
If the text is overlaid on the image, it should be treated as a design element, not just a caption. herido pero aun caminando 4k top
You might be thinking: Four kilometers? That’s barely a warm-up. And you’d be right—for the old me. The me before the wound. That version of myself would have clocked 10K before breakfast and called it a Tuesday.
But here’s the secret no one tells you about recovery: you don’t start where you left off. You start where you are.
Where I was, on Tuesday morning, was at my front door in worn-out sneakers, staring at the sidewalk like it was a mountain. Four kilometers sounded like forty. But something—stubbornness, hope, or just the need to prove my own sadness wrong—pushed me out the door. Michael Jordan playing the NBA Finals with food poisoning
Documentary clips of wounded soldiers walking to evacuation points or firefighters emerging from rubble have been recut with cinematic LUTs and uploaded in 4K. These are not movies; these are real men and women living the phrase every day.