I thought I knew everything about my quiet, post-retirement life—until one ordinary night, a single Facebook post changed everything. What I found in an old photo took me straight back to a love I thought I’d left behind decades ago.
never expected a quiet night on the couch to open a door I believed had long since closed. My name is Susan. I’m 67, and this is my story.
I’ve been a nurse for over forty years. These days, I only pick up a few shifts here and there, mostly to help my daughter, Megan. She works full-time and is raising two kids on her own after her ex-husband disappeared four years ago.

I watch the kids after school, help with the bills when things get tight, and keep the house running so Megan can breathe. I don’t complain. They’re my family, and they’ve given me more joy than anything else in my life.
I know the rhythm of my days: early mornings with coffee before the kids wake up, grocery trips, afternoon cartoons, and the occasional late shift at the hospital. Nights are usually slow, filled with TV shows I’ve seen before or a good book if I can keep my eyes open.Books & Literature
My husband and I separated many years ago, and since then, I haven’t built any romantic relationships.
Christmas was approaching when I came home after my last shift before the holiday. I arrived around 9 p.m. after a long day in the cardiac wing. My feet throbbed from standing all day, and a familiar ache settled into my back.
I reheated leftover meatloaf, poured myself a cup of herbal tea, and sank into the couch. The kids were asleep, Megan was grading papers in her room, and for a moment, I just sat in the stillness, listening to the hum of the refrigerator and the occasional creak of the old floorboards.
Out of habit, I opened Facebook. I don’t use it often—mostly to keep in touch with former nurses and see pictures of friends’ grandkids. I also follow a few community pages: neighborhood watches, garage sales, and local reunions.
That’s when I froze.
A faded photo appeared on my screen—grainy, clearly scanned from an old print. My eyes caught the background first: the ivy-covered brick wall of the college library at my old university. That wall hadn’t changed in decades
Then I looked closer.
The young woman in the photo was me.
I was wearing the faded denim jacket I used to live in back then, my hair parted in the middle, soft waves framing my face. Standing beside me, smiling with his hand just shy of my shoulder, was Daniel.
My first love.



