Trying to fix my hair and make myself look prettier. I watch tutorials on my phone and practice over and over, but I can’t get it right.
I can’t make myself look good enough.”
But then she said something that completely shattered me into pieces.
“I don’t want to disappoint you, Mom.” Fresh tears spilled down her cheeks. “I don’t want you to feel ashamed when people see me and realize I’m your daughter. I don’t want you to look at me and wish I were prettier, like you are.
Everyone says how beautiful you were in high school, and then they look at me like I’m some kind of mistake.”
I felt my own tears start to fall.
I couldn’t hold them back anymore. “Oh, Lily.
Baby, no.” I reached out and took her face gently in my hands, making her look at me. “Listen to me very carefully.
That girl in that picture?
She was miserable. The smiles you see in those yearbook photos were fake. I spent hours every morning trying to look perfect because I thought that’s what mattered.
I thought if I could just be pretty enough, people would like me, and I would finally feel good enough.”
Lily looked at me in silence.
“But I was so insecure, Lily. I was terrified every single day that someone would see through the makeup and the hair and realize I was just as scared and uncertain as everyone else.
Beauty never mattered, sweetheart. It never made me happy.
You know what makes me happy?
You. Exactly as you are right now.”
“But I’m not pretty like you,” she whispered. “You’re so much more than pretty.
You’re kind, smart, funny, and creative.
You have the biggest heart of anyone I know. And I have been so busy working and worrying about money that I failed to see you were fighting this battle all alone.
I failed to tell you every single day how incredible you are.”
I pulled her into my arms and held her tight while we both cried. We sat there on the bathroom floor for what felt like hours, just holding each other and letting everything spill out.
Eventually, the tears slowed, and we started talking.
I told her stories about my own insecurities in high school, and about the times I felt inadequate and scared. She told me more about Madison and Brooke, the daily comments, and how they made her feel invisible. “From now on, things are going to be different,” I promised her.
“I’m going to come home early one day every week, and we’re going to have beauty hours together.
Not because you need to change who you are, but because if you want to learn about makeup and hair, we should do it together. For fun.
Not because anyone else expects it from you.”
A small smile appeared on her tear-stained face. “Really?”
“Really.
And Lily, I need you to promise me something.
If those girls say anything cruel to you again, you come straight to me. We’ll talk to the school counselor and your teachers. You don’t have to face this alone anymore.”
She nodded and leaned her head against my shoulder.
The weeks that followed brought slow but steady changes.
True to my word, I started coming home early every Wednesday. We would sit together in front of the bathroom mirror, trying different makeup looks and laughing when we made mistakes.
Sometimes we didn’t even use makeup at all. We just talked, braided each other’s hair, and ate ice cream straight from the container.
I noticed Lily started holding her head a little higher when she left for school.
She stopped rushing to her room when she got home and began talking to me again about her classes, friends, and dreams. A few months later, while I was making dinner, Lily said something that made my heart swell with pride. “Mom, I don’t lock the bathroom door anymore.
I don’t need to hide in there to feel pretty.
I just needed to know you love me the way I am.”
I set down the spatula I was holding and hugged her tight, tears streaming down my face again. But this time, they weren’t tears of fear or heartbreak but of joy, relief, and overwhelming love for this brave, beautiful girl who was finally learning to see herself the way I’d always seen her.
Perfect, exactly as she was meant to be.

