Spotlighting Remarkable Women and Girls

Loving Him Was Not Part of the Plan

By Anonymous

I never imagined I would find myself here, writing quietly about a love I once believed was impossible. At this stage of my life, I thought I understood how love worked, or at least how it was supposed to work. I believed love followed order. That it respected timing, age, expectation, and the invisible rules society writes for women without ever asking if we agree. I thought love, if it came again, would arrive gently and sensibly, wrapped in approval and familiarity. What I did not expect was to meet someone fifteen years younger than me and feel something awaken that I had carefully trained myself to live without.

When I first met him, nothing about the moment felt significant enough to change my life. It was ordinary in the way many important beginnings are. Conversation came easily, laughter arrived without effort, and there was a softness in how he listened that felt unfamiliar. I noticed it, but I did not allow myself to name it. Women like me learn to be careful with hope. We learn to translate certain emotions into safer language before they grow too visible. So I told myself it was simply kindness, simply attention, simply coincidence. I did not yet understand that the quietest moments are often the ones that rewrite us completely.

The awareness came slowly. There was no dramatic turning point, no single confession, no cinematic realization. Just a gradual shift in how the air felt when he was near, how conversations lingered longer than necessary, how silence between us felt full rather than empty. I tried to reason my way out of it. I reminded myself of the years between us, of the different worlds we had grown up in, of how easily people judge what they do not understand. I told myself that wisdom meant restraint, that maturity meant distance, that dignity meant knowing when not to begin. But feelings do not disappear simply because they are inconvenient. They wait. They deepen. They become honest in ways logic cannot control.

What unsettled me most was not his age, but how alive I felt in his presence. It had been a long time since I experienced that kind of emotional lightness, the kind that makes ordinary days feel quietly meaningful. Somewhere along the years, I had learned to choose stability over possibility, calm over curiosity, safety over wonder. I did not resent those choices; they protected me when I needed protection. But loving him made me realize how much of myself I had placed on pause without noticing. He did not treat me like a woman who was past discovery. He did not look at me through the lens of time or expectation. He simply saw me as I was, and that kind of recognition is both beautiful and frightening when you are not used to receiving it.

I worried, of course. About what people would think. About how the story would sound when told outside the tenderness in which it existed. Society is kinder to men who love younger women than it is to women who dare to do the same. There are quiet rules about when a woman is still allowed to be desired, when she is permitted to begin again, when her softness is still considered appropriate. I had lived within those rules for so long that stepping outside them felt almost rebellious. Yet the truth remained: what I felt was real, and denying it did not make me noble. It only made me lonely.

Loving him was not dramatic in the way people expect forbidden love to be. It was gentle. Steady. Built from small, consistent moments rather than grand gestures. It lived in thoughtful questions, in shared quiet, in the simple comfort of being understood without explanation. There was no illusion of perfection. I am old enough to know that love, no matter how sincere, does not erase life’s complications. But there was honesty, and there was care, and there was a sense of beginning that felt strangely sacred. I realized that love is less about timing than we pretend. It does not arrive when the world decides it should. It arrives when two people recognize something true in each other and choose not to look away.

I still do not know how this story ends. Perhaps that uncertainty is part of what makes it meaningful. At my age, you understand that nothing in life is guaranteed simply because it is beautiful. Time moves. Circumstances change. People grow in directions we cannot predict. But I also know that refusing joy because it does not look conventional is its own kind of loss. There is courage in allowing yourself to feel happiness when it appears in an unexpected form. There is freedom in choosing truth over appearance, and tenderness over fear.

Maybe some people would read this and see only the difference in years. I understand that. Numbers are easy to measure; emotions are not. But what I have learned, quietly and without announcement, is that love does not count time the way we do. It does not ask whether something looks reasonable from the outside. It asks only whether it is sincere. And in the quiet space where this love lives, sincerity has always been enough.

I am still learning not to apologize for the timing of my own happiness. Still learning that beginning again is not a failure of wisdom but sometimes its greatest expression. If this love teaches me anything, it is that life does not end where society expects it to. There are still new rooms to enter, new light to notice, new tenderness to receive. And sometimes, the most unexpected stories become the ones that remind us we are still fully alive.

So I keep this truth gently, without needing the world to understand it. Loving him was never part of my plan. But perhaps the most honest parts of life rarely are.

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Raising Women Magazine Issue 38 – March 2026

As we approach International Women’s Day, we lean into this year’s agenda: Give to Gain. It is a simple phrase, yet profoundly strategic. Progress for women has never been sustained by visibility alone. It has been built through investment, mentorship, solidarity, and the deliberate transfer of opportunity.

On our cover, Ambassador Keisha McGuire represents this principle in motion. Her leadership in global diplomacy reminds us that when women give knowledge, courage, and access, they do not diminish their power. They multiply it.

This edition examines what it truly means to give: time, resources, platforms, protection, policy influence. And what we gain in return: stronger institutions, fairer systems, and a generation of women who enter rooms already prepared.

International Women’s Day is not a performance. It is a responsibility.

When women give intentionally, we all gain collectively.

The question is not whether we will celebrate. The question is how we will contribute.

Raising Women Magazine Issue 38 – March 2026

As we approach International Women’s Day, we lean into this year’s agenda: Give to Gain. It is a simple phrase, yet profoundly strategic. Progress for women has never been sustained by visibility alone. It has been built through investment, mentorship, solidarity, and the deliberate transfer of opportunity.

On our cover, Ambassador Keisha McGuire represents this principle in motion. Her leadership in global diplomacy reminds us that when women give knowledge, courage, and access, they do not diminish their power. They multiply it.

This edition examines what it truly means to give: time, resources, platforms, protection, policy influence. And what we gain in return: stronger institutions, fairer systems, and a generation of women who enter rooms already prepared.

International Women’s Day is not a performance. It is a responsibility.

When women give intentionally, we all gain collectively.

The question is not whether we will celebrate. The question is how we will contribute.

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Raising Women Magazine Issue 38 – March 2026

As we approach International Women’s Day, we lean into this year’s agenda: Give to Gain. It is a simple phrase, yet profoundly strategic. Progress for women has never been sustained by visibility alone. It has been built through investment, mentorship, solidarity, and the deliberate transfer of opportunity.

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