Spotlighting Remarkable Women and Girls

THE MANY FACES OF HER: LETTERS WRITTEN IN LOVE TO THE WOMAN BECOMING

By Francisca Sinjae

February is loud about love.

It sells it in red boxes, ties it with ribbons, and insists it must be dramatic, romantic, and visible. Love, according to February, should arrive with flowers, witnesses, and proof.

But this letter is not for that kind of love.

This is not a love letter to romance. It is a love letter to womanhood. To the quiet, complicated, unfinished, constantly evolving experience of being her. To the girl she was, the woman she is, and the version of herself she is still becoming, slowly, imperfectly, honestly.

This letter is for the woman who has loved deeply, worked quietly, adjusted endlessly, and still wonders if she is doing enough. It is for the woman who carries more than she names and survives more than she celebrates.

This is for her.

TO THE GIRL SHE ONCE WAS

Dear girl,

You did not know how early you would start adjusting.

You did not know that being agreeable would be rewarded before being honest. That silence would sometimes feel safer than expression. That you would learn to read rooms long before anyone taught you how to name your feelings.

There was a time when your body was simply your own. Before it became something to monitor, explain, protect, or defend. You remember the first moment you realised you were being watched differently. The first time you were told, directly or indirectly, to shrink.

You were still hopeful then.

You believed effort would be enough. That kindness would always be returned. That doing the right thing would protect you from disappointment. No one warned you how often you would have to grieve versions of yourself you never got to fully become.

This letter does not apologise to you.

It thanks you.

For your curiosity. For your courage. For carrying wonder forward even when the world tried to teach you caution first.

TO THE WOMAN SHE IS NOW

Dear woman,

You wake up already tired. Not the kind of tired sleep fixes, but the kind that comes from being the one who remembers, adjusts, anticipates, and holds things together. You check messages before you check in with yourself. You move through your day managing expectations that were never formally assigned to you, yet somehow became yours.

You are expected to be capable without being intimidating. Soft without being fragile. Ambitious without being demanding. Grateful without ever asking for too much. You learned these balances quietly, through correction rather than instruction.

Some days, you miss the version of yourself that did not think this much before speaking. The one who did not rehearse explanations for her choices. You don’t say this out loud often, because gratitude is supposed to cancel out grief. But both live in the same body.

You love deeply, and it costs you. You smooth edges. You translate emotions. You absorb tension so others can remain comfortable. This work is invisible, and yet its absence would be felt immediately if you stopped.

And still, you are here.

Not effortlessly. Not perfectly. But honestly.

This letter sees you, not for what you give, but for who you are while giving it.

TO THE WOMAN SHE IS BECOMING

Dear becoming woman,

You are learning that growth is not glamorous. It does not arrive with applause. It looks like unlearning habits you were praised for. It looks like disappointing people who benefited from your silence. It looks like choosing differently and sitting with the discomfort that follows.

You are becoming someone who asks harder questions. Someone who rests without explanation. Someone who no longer confuses endurance with worthiness. This work is slow, and it often feels lonely.

Some days, becoming feels like loss. Other days, it feels like relief. Both are allowed.

You are not late. You are not lost. You are unfolding in your own time. Becoming is not a destination. It is a relationship with yourself.

This letter trusts the woman you are growing into, even when you don’t yet.

TO HER SOFTNESS

Dear softness,

They told her you would break her. That you would make life harder. That the world would not be kind to women who feel deeply. So she learned to hide you. To apologise for you. To harden herself in places where she was never meant to.

But softness is how she survives without losing herself.

Softness is how she notices. How she listens. How she remains human in systems that reward numbness. Softness is not the absence of strength. It is strength that does not announce itself.

She does not owe the world hardness to earn respect. Her softness is not something to overcome. It is something to protect.

This letter honours the tenderness she has refused to surrender.

TO HER STRENGTH NO ONE SEES

Dear unseen strength,

No one taught her how to do this work, yet she does it daily. Remembering what needs to be done. Anticipating needs. Holding conversations together when everyone else shuts down.

No one thanks her for noticing moods, carrying emotional weight, or staying present when retreat would be easier. She has learned how to keep functioning while exhausted. How to make it all look manageable so no one worries about her.

This letter names that labour.

It says it counts.

Even when no one else ever says it out loud.

TO LOVE, AS SHE KNOWS IT

Dear love,

She has learned that love is not always gentle. That it can demand compromise, silence, and endurance. She has loved people who did not know how to hold her carefully. She has stayed longer than she should have because she believed understanding would eventually be returned.

She is learning now that love should not cost her, her voice. That love does not require her to disappear. That love can be steady without being consuming.

This February, love does not need to be loud. It just needs to include her.

TO HER, ALWAYS

Dear woman,

You are not imagining how heavy it can feel. You are not failing because you are tired. You are not behind because your life does not look the way you were told it should by now.

You are doing the work of becoming with limited instruction and constant expectation. And you are still here.

This letter does not ask you to do more. It simply sits with you. A reminder that who you are, right now, is worthy of love that does not demand proof.

You are becoming.

And that is not a weakness.

It is the most honest thing you can be.

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