The Courage to Belong Where You Don’t Fit
If you’ve ever waited for someone to own what they did… this one’s for you.
There’s no need for me to tell you his name.
You need only know that in another lifetime, he was the love of my life.
Though I was already a mother of three when we met, I saw a future for us and the joy that filled my heart was impenetrable. Or so I thought…
Back then, I had a rule: the men I dated didn’t meet my children until I was sure the relationship was serious.
After nearly two years in, I finally felt ready.
I still have the pictures from that day: my babies smiling, him smiling, me smiling like God himself had signed off on my dreams.
I saw a future for us.
Let me say that again so you catch the weight of it:
I saw a future for us.
In my mind, I had already sent out the wedding invitations.
I was settling into a life I was convinced belonged to me.
Only to learn shortly after that he had wedding plans too…
Just not with me.
While we were dating (building chemistry, sharing secrets, making memories) he was pursuing someone else.
My whole heart shattered, and I limped away carrying the pieces of my self-esteem in the palms of my hands.
Fast-forward 25 years and two continents later.
I returned to the U.S., and through some mutual friends, we reconnected by text. It started simple with family updates, work, old friends. Nothing deep. Nothing dangerous.
And then one day… that message came.
The message.
The one you see pictured above.
I can’t explain the feeling.
It was like a weight I didn’t even know I was still carrying finally slid off my shoulders.
Like someone refunded a piece of me I thought I’d never see again.
I had given so much of myself back then… freely, openly, wholeheartedly.
And I left that relationship feeling robbed, denied, unseen.
But that text…
I’ll save the juicier details for my upcoming memoir.
Just know it touched me in a place time had not reached.
Why am I sharing this now?
Because it’s time.
And because the sender of that message has since passed away.
I believe he knew he was sick… that he was trying to ease his conscience, settle his spirit, make peace with his choices.
Maybe he was offering me the apology I didn’t know how much I still needed.
And here’s the truth:
His passing reminded me that closure doesn’t always come wrapped in conversation.
Sometimes it arrives quietly, in a text you weren’t expecting, from a man who finally found his courage too late.
Still, I honor that moment.
I honor the woman I was when we met… soft, hopeful, believing.
And I honor the woman I became after… wiser, grounded, and free.
The love was real.
The lesson was greater.
And now… I’m finally ready to tell the rest of that story.
This story is one doorway into a much bigger chapter of my life, one I’ve never told publicly until now.
I’m writing about it with the same honesty, hindsight, and courage you felt here.
If you want to walk with me as I finally put these pieces onto the page, stay close. More is coming.
Have you ever received an apology years after the hurt — and did it bring you closure, or open a new layer of healing?
Share your story in the comments. I read every single one.



Great gift! I was the one doing the apologizing some years later...in a business situation though. Thing is, the person didn't even WANT it at that point and I still felt like I had an open loop. Had to come to grips with the fact that there was nothing more that I could do except heal myself and move on.
What a timely gift. I’m glad he apologized. Apologies seem rare these days. Yet, when they come their impact can be timeless. Thank you.