Confession of My First Heartbreak

Confession Of My First Heartbreak

I don’t know why I’m writing this now, but maybe it’s because I never really let it out. It happened back in school—10th grade. I was 15. And I thought I was in love. His name was Aman. He wasn’t the most popular guy or the one who played football or stood out in a crowd. But for me, he was everything. The way he smiled when he was nervous, the way his voice softened when he spoke to his friends—I noticed it all.

I had a silly little hope that maybe he noticed me too. I’d catch his eye across the classroom and tell myself that look meant something. I used to write his name in the last pages of my notebook, dream up conversations we never had. And then one day, I heard from a friend—he liked someone else. Someone prettier, funnier, louder. Someone who wasn’t invisible like me.

It felt like the air got sucked out of me. I remember going to the washroom, locking myself in a stall, and crying quietly so no one would hear. The heartbreak wasn’t dramatic, no big fight, no betrayal. Just the crushing weight of reality—that what I felt meant nothing to him.

I moved on, of course. But even today, when I look back, I still feel the sting. That was my first taste of heartbreak—the kind that teaches you that love, or what you think is love, can hurt silently.

From One Broken Heart to Another

Years have passed since that quiet heartbreak in a school corridor. Life, as it always does, moved on. I studied, built a career, found love again—and lost it too. And then, I found the kind that stayed. The kind that grew roots. The kind that gave me you.

You—my daughter. My sunshine. My mirror.

And now, here I am… watching you crumble under the weight of a boy who didn’t choose you. Watching you hold your tears until your pillow can’t hold any more. Watching you pretend you don’t care. Watching you push me away when I try to reach in.

You think I can’t understand. That I’m too far removed from your world. That my love stories are ancient and irrelevant. But sweetheart, pain doesn’t age. Rejection feels the same whether you’re 15 or 50.

I want to tell you—I do know what a broken heart feels like. I know what it’s like to think you’ll never laugh the same way again. I know the ache of unanswered messages, the awkward silences in crowded classrooms, the fear that you’re not “enough.”

But here’s what I’ve learned: you are more than someone’s inability to see your worth.

I wish I could hand you a fast-forward button to skip this part. But this pain—this phase—is shaping you. Just like mine did for me. And someday, maybe years from now, you’ll look back and smile at how far you’ve come. Maybe with a daughter of your own, who’ll cry over her first heartbreak, and you’ll remember me.

So maybe this isn’t just for you, my love. Maybe this is for all the girls sitting in their rooms, trying to make sense of love and loss.

Let’s talk more, as women. As mothers. As daughters. Let’s tell our stories, raw and real. Because no, you’re not the first girl to cry over someone who couldn’t see your light—and you won’t be the last. But yes, your story doesn’t end here.

Your prince charming? He’s out there. But even better—you’ll meet yourself along the way. And she will be your greatest love of all.

This too shall pass, baby girl. I promise.

Mom


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