At 60, I felt ready to start living for myself again. After years of raising my son alone and working tirelessly to keep our home afloat, I finally allowed room for joy.
Sewing had always been my small escape, so when I got engaged to Quentin—a kind man I met after a simple act of help in a grocery store parking lot—I decided to create my own wedding dress. I chose a soft blush-pink satin, a color I had avoided for decades because my ex-husband once insisted it was “too childish.”
Stitch by stitch, the dress became a symbol of the life I was finally reclaiming. A week before the wedding, my son Lachlan and his wife, Jocelyn, came to visit. Proudly, I showed them the finished dress. Jocelyn laughed almost instantly. “Pink? At your age?” she said, shaking her head. “You should wear something beige or blue—this looks like something for a teenager.” Her words stung more than I wanted to admit, but I simply smiled and told her the dress made me happy. Lachlan stayed quiet, and I assumed he didn’t want to cause tension.