We were at the grocery store when my daughter tugged at my sleeve, her face pale. She leaned close and whispered, “Mom… it started.”
For a moment, I froze. My little girl — not so little anymore — had just gotten her first period. I looked around helplessly at the endless shelves of feminine products, completely overwhelmed. Pads, tampons, liners — I had no idea which one to pick.
Then, out of nowhere, a woman in her late 40s, who must have overheard us, gently placed a box in my hands. She smiled kindly and said, “These are the ones she’ll be most comfortable with.”
I barely managed a thank-you before turning to my daughter. But she was crying.
“I’m not crying because I’m embarrassed, Mom,” she said through tears. “It’s just… I wish Grandma were here. She always said she’d be with me when this happened.”
That’s when it hit me — the woman who helped us looked so much like my late mother. Same gentle voice, same comforting eyes. She’d appeared at the exact moment I needed her most.
By the time I turned back to thank the stranger again, she was gone.
Some moments in life feel too perfect to be coincidence. I’ll never forget that day — not just because my daughter became a young woman, but because I felt, for a brief second, that my mom was there too.