Spotlighting Remarkable Women and Girls

The Myth of “When It Happens, Then I Will…”

By Dr. May Ikeora-Amamgbo

I recently attended a birthday celebration of a fellow beautypreneur, popularly known as Diiadem. It was a lavish celebration of life, even though she had just turned thirty five. The event quickly became the talk of the town, with many describing it as a wedding. It reminded me, quite vividly, of my own fortieth birthday, which I had deliberately organised with the same sense of grandeur and intention. People joked that the only thing missing was a groom. It would have been easy to dismiss both celebrations as displays of wealth, but that would miss the point entirely. What they truly represented was something far more radical. They were declarations. Declarations of presence, of gratitude, of self acknowledgement, without waiting for life to arrange itself neatly first.

At the time of my own celebration, I was forty, unmarried, and without a child. Yet I was deeply at peace. Not performative peace, not the kind that seeks validation, but the kind that comes from deciding, quite firmly, that life is not something to be postponed. It was gratitude without expectation. It was celebrating myself without asking for permission. It was choosing to feel complete without tying that feeling to a proposal, a timeline, or a societal milestone. It was, in many ways, a quiet refusal to subscribe to the idea that life begins after something happens.

This idea, subtle as it is, shapes more lives than we care to admit. It is the belief that says, when it happens, then I will. When I get married, then I will enjoy. When I move abroad, then I will live. When I earn more, then I will rest. When I finally arrive, then I will become. It sounds reasonable, even disciplined. It gives the illusion of structure. But beneath it lies a quiet form of self denial, one that postpones not just joy, but identity itself.

I remember a friend who lived entirely within this framework. She had convinced herself that a certain way of living, not extravagant, not even indulgent, but simply intentional, would only begin when she travelled abroad. Until then, she would wait. Years passed. The trip never happened. Life continued, but in a reduced form, as though she was living a placeholder version of herself. At some point, I told her something that stayed with her. Until you treat this place as home, you are going nowhere. It was not about geography. It was about mindset. Eight years later, she shifted. Not out of frustration, but out of acceptance. She began to live fully where she was. Interestingly, within a year of that shift, she took that trip. Not out of pressure, but from a place of ease. And it was better than she had imagined.

That distinction matters. There is a difference between waiting under pressure and living in alignment. One is driven by lack. The other by presence. One delays life. The other allows it to unfold.

My own story followed a similar pattern. Shortly after I stopped waiting for life to meet certain conditions, I met my husband. Today, I am happily married with a beautiful daughter. It would be tempting to tell this story as though the outcome validates the approach, but that would be misleading. The real shift did not happen when I met him. It happened before, when I stopped structuring my life around what had not yet arrived.

I remember responding to Diiadem after her celebration. I told her, quite simply, you know what comes after this level of gratitude. It was not a prediction. It was an observation. Gratitude, when it is genuine and not transactional, alters something fundamental. It shifts how you see yourself, how you engage with life, and how life, in turn, responds to you.

What many women are navigating today is not a lack of opportunity, but a misalignment of timing and identity. There is a constant negotiation between who they are now and who they believe they are allowed to be later. The result is a life lived in suspension. Present, but not fully expressed. Capable, but not fully deployed. Waiting to be chosen before choosing themselves.

The danger of conditional living is not just delay. It is distortion. Over time, you begin to forget who you are outside of what you are waiting for. Your confidence becomes tied to outcomes. Your joy becomes conditional. Your sense of self becomes negotiable.

And yet, life rarely unfolds in the neat, linear way we imagine. Milestones do not always arrive on schedule. Timelines shift. Expectations evolve. If your life is built around waiting for certainty, you may find yourself perpetually unprepared for the life that actually comes.

There is, however, another way to live. It is quieter, less celebrated, but infinitely more grounded. It is the decision to engage fully with the present. To build, to grow, to enjoy, to refine, without waiting for external validation. It is the understanding that becoming is not triggered by events, but sustained by posture.

This is what both celebrations, hers and mine, represented. Not extravagance, but alignment. Not performance, but presence. They were moments that said, I am here now, and that is enough to begin.

The myth of when it happens, then I will is not just about timing. It is about permission. And perhaps the most powerful shift a woman can make is to realise that she does not need to wait for life to grant it.

Because the truth is, life does not begin when it happens.

It begins when she decides it already has.

And in that decision, steady and unannounced, she finds her light.

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