Today I had coffee with my 17-year-old self.
We both ordered iced vanilla lattes.
We were both late.
She looked radiant—somehow glowing and exhausted, still determined to make it all look easy.
I looked rushed. Thrown together. Hurried.

When I sat down across from her, I recognized the truth behind her eyes—the fear, the doubt, the way she was holding her breath beneath that perfect mask.
She asked if we had graduated.
I smiled and told her, Yes.
We worked hard and graduated early.
We walked proudly across that stage, every second of that moment earned.
She asked if we pursued our dance dream.
I told her no.
But we dance in grocery store aisles with our children now.
In the kitchen with our husband, barefoot and laughing when the world finally quiets down.
We still dance. Just… differently.
She asked if we married the boy who made us feel wild and safe.
I told her yes.
And her whole body softened—like she could finally exhale.

She asked if we made the right choice.
I took her hand.
I told her yes—a thousand times, yes.
She asked for every detail.
I told her about the three children we would raise. How fiercely we would love them, how wildly they would grow — and how we grow right along with them.
I told her that one day she would find peace in her daily life, happiness in the smallest moments, and fulfillment in the person she becomes.
And when it was time to go, I pulled her into a hug and whispered,
I’m proud of you.
She smiled, but I held her face in my hands and said it again—louder this time:
I am proud of you.

She cried. I cried. We both laughed through the tears.
Then I watched her walk away—slower this time, like the weight she carried had become a little lighter. Her hand drifted gently to her growing middle, holding close the quiet start of a story she was never prepared for, but one that would become the beginning of our everything.


