The Chicago Journal

Midnight Trains, Broken Elevators, and the Discipline of Not Quitting

Midnight Trains, Broken Elevators, and the Discipline of Not Quitting
Photo Courtesy: Eugen Ehrenberg

By: Connor Clarke

There is a moment most people never see.

It is not the diagnosis. Not the accident. Not even the first time someone sits in a wheelchair and realizes life just shifted permanently.

The real moment comes later. Quiet. Uncelebrated. Usually at night.

For Eugen Ehrenberg, that moment looked like traveling alone to Hamburg, navigating the city with a wheelchair and hand bike, and getting home close to midnight.

No applause. No milestone banner.

Just movement. Freedom, slowly returning.

And that is where his story stops being about survival and starts becoming something sharper.

Freedom Does Not Come Back All at Once

It would be easy to assume that regaining independence feels like a switch flipping back on.

It does not.

Eugen describes it more like repetition. The first solo trips felt uncertain. Every station, every transfer carried a question mark. Would something break down? Would access fail? Would he get stuck somewhere with no way forward?

But he kept going back.

Each trip added a layer of familiarity. Each small success chipped away at the sense of limitation.

And somewhere along the way, the shift happened.

Not dramatic. Not emotional.

Just the realization that he could move through the world again on his own terms.

The Advice People Do Not Want to Hear

When people ask for practical advice after a life-changing diagnosis, they usually expect something tactical.

Routines. Tools. Systems.

Eugen goes in a different direction.

Do not give up.

That is his starting point. Not as a slogan, but as a rule.

It sounds simple until you actually try to live it on a day when nothing works. When your body does not cooperate. When plans collapse because something as basic as an elevator fails.

He pairs that mindset with something else that feels almost contradictory.

Stay calm.

Not passive. Not detached. Calm enough to keep looking forward instead of spiraling into worst-case scenarios.

Because in his experience, the future rarely unfolds the way you imagine it in those early moments of fear.

And more often than not, solutions show up from places you did not even consider.

Rebuilding a Life Without a Blueprint

Eugen does not pretend he handled everything well from the beginning.

He admits he underestimated his condition early on. That delay came with consequences. By the time reality fully hit, it was not a gentle transition. It was a full reset.

After the accident in 2011, he reached a point where the old version of his life was no longer accessible.

There is no guidebook for that moment.

You are left rebuilding piece by piece, often without knowing what the final shape will look like.

What stands out in his reflection is not regret. It is gratitude.

Not the polished kind. The kind that comes after going through something difficult enough that it forces you to rethink everything.

He does not romanticize the pain. But he acknowledges what it gave him.

Clarity. Perspective. A deeper sense that life does not stop just because it changes direction.

Humor Is Not Optional

There is a detail in Eugen’s story that could easily be overlooked but should not be.

He laughs.

Not occasionally. Regularly.

Standing in front of an elevator marked out of order is not funny in a practical sense. It is inconvenient at best and exhausting at worst.

But he chooses to see the absurdity in it.

There is a story he shares about arriving at a broken elevator with a station employee who had just used it moments earlier. The employee was shocked. Eugen was not.

He had seen it too many times.

Instead of frustration taking over, he laughed.

That reaction is not accidental. It is learned.

Without humor, those repeated obstacles pile up fast. They turn into frustration, then into something heavier.

Humor breaks that cycle. It does not fix the problem. It changes how you carry it.

Strength That Builds After the Fact

People often talk about inner strength as if it is something you either have or you do not.

Eugen’s experience suggests the opposite.

Strength shows up after you start moving.

Not before.

He did not feel capable at the beginning. There were moments where giving up felt like the only logical option. Times when the loss of mobility, the shift in identity, and the constant adjustments pushed him close to the edge.

What pulled him through was not a single breakthrough.

It was an accumulation.

Support from friends who refused to let him drift too far.

A sense of purpose that remained, even if it looked different than before.

Unexpected influences, like studying yoga texts, that opened new ways of thinking.

And most importantly, action. Small, repeated actions that slowly rebuilt both physical and mental capacity.

Trusting Yourself Again

One of the more subtle changes Eugen talks about is trust.

Not in the world. In himself.

There is a point in any major life disruption where self-trust erodes. You question your ability to handle what comes next. You doubt your capacity to adapt.

Through training, movement, and experience, that trust started coming back.

He noticed something that shifts the entire perspective.

Abilities you think are gone can return.

Not always in the same form. Not always completely. But enough to change what feels possible.

That realization rewires how you approach future challenges.

Instead of assuming limitations, you start looking for potential.

Forward Is a Decision, Not a Feeling

The title of Forward, Giving Up is Not an Option sounds bold.

But when you look closer, it is less about confidence and more about discipline.

Moving forward is not always motivated. It is often uncomfortable. Repetitive. Quiet.

It looks like getting on another train, even after the last trip went wrong.

It looks like adapting plans in real time when something breaks down.

It looks like refusing to let one bad moment define the rest of the day.

Over time, those decisions stack up.

And eventually, they create something that resembles freedom again.

The Part Most People Miss

What makes Eugen’s story resonate is not the adversity itself.

It is the way he talks about it without trying to make it sound bigger or smaller than it is.

There is no dramatic transformation moment where everything suddenly makes sense.

There is just a steady shift.

From resistance to acceptance.

From frustration to problem-solving.

From limitation to movement.

And underneath all of it, a simple principle that keeps showing up.

Life keeps going.

The question is whether you decide to move with it or let it pass you by.

For Eugen, that decision has already been made.

For more information, visit Eugen Ehrenberg’s official website or find his book on Amazon.

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