This one is super free! It is not a programming problem so much as a BASH problem.
Using bash parameter expansion only https://www.gnu.org/software/bash/manual/html_node/Shell-Parameter-Expansion.html
Given an arbitrarily long path, such as "/head/shoulders/knees/and/toes/eyes/ears/mouth" stored in a variable $TEMP construct a parameter expansion to render only the last two subdirectory and filename like "eyes/ears/mouth" such that you can simply offer the command "echo ${TEMP<stuff goes in here>}"
And yes I do know how much easier it is to do with grep, sed, python, perl, awk <insert your favorite alternate solution here> can do it better and easier. This is a real world problem, and someone on Reddit pointed me in the right direction.
Solution (with caveat)
The following _technically_ satisfies your requirements; in that I only replace the stuff in brackets from your example and doesn't use anything but parameter expansion.
However, there's a serious limitation I haven't figured out how to work around - it relies on knowing the name of the variable $TEMP. As stated the problem permits this, but that means I can't save my answer in a variable and reuse it like echo ${TEMP1<foo>}; echo ${TEMP2<foo>} without modifying <foo> in between.
echo ${TEMP#${TEMP%/**/**/**}}
Solution (with caveat)
@khird you know the name of the variable because you are working with it... I think the original problem was based on something like
for I in $(ls SOMETHING) ; do SOMETHING with ${I <stuf>)
I just stored a bunch of crap in the $TEMP variable to play with it and not make the problem too complex.