“For the record,” he said, grinning, “you’re smiling.”
And I was.
That night didn’t fix anything. It didn’t change my diagnosis or erase the months ahead.
But it gave me something I didn’t have anymore.
A moment where I wasn’t the girl in the wheelchair.
Just… a girl at prom.
After graduation, life pulled us apart.
My family moved for rehab. Surgeries. Recovery that wasn’t really recovery so much as adaptation.
I learned how to stand again. Then how to walk—first with braces, then without. Slowly. Imperfectly. But forward.
I also learned how many places in the world quietly shut people out.
That became my fuel.
I studied design. Fought my way through school. Built a career around spaces that didn’t exclude people the way I had been excluded.
Eventually, I built my own firm.
On paper, it looked like success.
In reality, it was something closer to survival turned into purpose.
Thirty years passed before I saw him again.
Not on purpose.
I spilled coffee in a small café near a job site, and a man came over with a mop, moving with a slight limp.
“Don’t move,” he said. “I’ve got it.”
There was something familiar about him, but I couldn’t place it right away.
Older. Tired. Worn in the way life does to people who carry too much for too long.
The next day, I went back.
And the day after that, I said it.