If you’ve got time.”
I went. She was pale but smiling. “They’re removing the fibroids,” she said.
“Finally. I’ve been putting it off for months. Part fear, part… I don’t even know.”
I sat beside her, awkward again.
“You’re brave.”
“No,” she said. “Just tired of being scared.”
After the surgery, things got better for her. She looked lighter.
Healthier. We started going on long walks. One day, she even laughed so hard she snorted—this loud, honking laugh.
I told her it sounded like a goose on a treadmill. She told me I sounded like a sitcom dad. We weren’t dating.
But we were something. Something safe. One summer evening, sitting on a park bench, she turned to me and said, “Do you ever think things happen for a reason?”
I shrugged.
“Sometimes. Other times, I think we just make meaning out of the mess.”
She smiled. “I like that.”
I was quiet for a second.
Then I said, “You changed my perspective. About assumptions. About people.
About what pain looks like.”
She nodded, eyes watering a little. “You changed mine too. I used to think everyone was out to judge me.
But you came back. You listened. That meant something.”
She reached into her bag and pulled out a small sketchbook.
Flipped it open to a page. There was a pencil drawing of the two of us—me sipping coffee, her with that half-smile she did when she was pretending not to laugh. “You kept saying I should draw again,” she said.
“So I did.”
I looked at the sketch, stunned. “You’re really good.”
She shrugged. “It’s easier to draw things that matter.”
The following spring, Renna opened a small art studio—mostly illustrations, some watercolor.
She named it Second Chances. I helped her with the website, did the whole social media thing for her. She called me her “tech guy-slash-cheerleader.”
A year later, we were sitting at that same café.
Her hand in mine. “I still get comments sometimes,” she said. “From strangers.
They assume. They always assume.”
I looked at her. “You wanna know the difference now?”
She raised an eyebrow.
“You don’t let it define you anymore.”
She smiled at me. “That… might be the nicest thing anyone’s ever said to me.”
Life has this wild way of teaching us through our mistakes. I judged someone in a moment without knowing her story.
And somehow, that moment turned into one of the most meaningful friendships—and eventually, something more—that I’ve ever known. So yeah, next time you feel like you know what someone’s going through, pause. Ask.
Or just… stay kind. You might be interrupting their worst day. Or the start of something beautiful.
