The Woman Who Cuts Up Wedding Dresses
And a refelction on independence.
Saturdays are usuallly spent catching up on chores and napping. But. I felt insiration moving through me, so I thought let me just write this and send it to you directly.
Yesterday afternoon I went out to the patio for a cup of coffee and a little sun.
A woman pulled up beside me, arms full of fabric and purpose. We struck up a conversation, and within minutes I was completely enchanted by her story.
She’s a quilter.
But not just any quilter. She doesn’t work with fabric store bolts or perfectly matched prints.
She works with old wedding dresses.
Gowns donated by women whose marriages didn’t go the way they hoped. Women who are ready to let go of what the dress once represented. Who are ready to shred the symbolism. Rip up the fairytale. Cut out the part of their story that didn’t lead to the ending they were promised.
And this woman — this artist — does just that.
She slices. She sews. She turns lace and silk and heartbreak into visual poetry. Quilted tapestries made from love stories that didn’t work out. Art stitched from unraveling. Beauty born of release.
Here’s the part that got me. She’s not just repurposing fabric. She’s reclaiming her own childhood dream. As a young girl, she loved quilting, always saw herself making art with her hands, telling stories with thread. But life veered. Jobs, kids, marriage, responsibilities. That creative dream got buried under all the roles she was expected to play.
Nobody suggested she pick the needle back up. Nobody printed an article telling her the shape her sixties were supposed to take. She just knew, the way you know your own hunger, and she followed it.
Funny thing happened to me yesterday, too.
A woman on my Substack Notes read something I wrote and decided, with real kindness, that my problem was isolation. That I needed to get out more, travel, fill my calendar. She’d solved that exact problem in her own life, and she wanted to hand me the solution.
She meant well. They always mean well.
But isolation isn’t my problem. It’s my pleasure. It’s a gift I chose on purpose, and I didn’t need a magazine or a newsletter to bless it before I trusted it.
That’s the part nobody sells you at this age. The retirement industry loves a woman with a calendar. It knows what to sell her. Every AARP glossy, every well-funded newsletter aimed at women our age, has already decided what your second act should look like. Get out more. Stay busy. Find your passion. Don’t be alone. It’s always the same prescription, printed for a demographic instead of a person, and it rarely asks what you actually want. It asks what sells. There is no indepndence of thought in any of it.
Two hundred fifty years ago tomorrow, a room full of men signed their names to a piece of paper that said, in essence, nobody else gets to decide this for us anymore. I’ve been thinking about what that means at seventy, alone in a house I love, painting every morning because I want to and not because anyone told me it was good for me.
Independence was never just about a country deciding its own government.
It’s about a woman deciding, quietly and without permission, what her own life is allowed to look like.
The quilter didn’t ask what a proper hobby for a woman her age should be. The women handing her their dresses didn’t ask what a proper way to grieve a marriage looks like. They wrote their own declarations, in thread and scissors, with nobody watching and nobody’s approval required.
Isn’t that the quiet revolution of the second act? Not the loud reinvention everyone keeps trying to sell you. The soft, stubborn independence of knowing your own mind, even when it disagrees with every well-meaning voice handing you advice.
We don’t need to prove anything. We don’t need their travel itinerary or their five habits of a fulfilling retirement. We just need to trust what’s actually ours, even when it looks like nothing at all from the outside. Especially then.
🌿 P.S. If this stirred something in you, chances are it will land somewhere in someone you love too. Feel free to forward this to a friend, a sister, or someone quietly tired of being told what her life should look like now. Happy 250th, and happy independence of thought.
If you’re just starting to sort out what you actually want, versus what you’ve been told to want, I made a gentle guide for that. It’s called The Roadmap to Reclaiming Your Dreams — 10 prompts to begin the conversation with yourself instead of with a magazine.
Start here → The Roadmap to Reclaiming Your Dreams
The uncomfortable thoughts you don’t say out loud? We say them on Tuesdays. This circle of women is private and available to paid subscribers.




I love my days full of solitude, punctuated occasionally by activities with others.
WONDERFUL story!
And I am working on being free from my own fearful self. Love casts out fear so I'm also working on giving myself a lot of that!
Let freedom RING!