“WHAT?? Cassandra blinked, flustered. “But why?”
“Because I don’t choose based on price tags. I choose based on love. And my mom? She already gave me everything I needed.”
“Lily! Get back here. How dare you?”
“Have a nice night, Cassandra!” And just like that, my daughter turned and walked into the school, heels clicking against the concrete, her head held high.
I sat frozen in the car, my heart swelling with pride I thought it might give out.
Prom night passed in a blur of photos and proud tears. Lily looked radiant, and more importantly, she looked happy and confident.
The next morning, I woke up to my phone buzzing with notifications. Lily had posted a photo from prom on her social media — she and her friends, all smiles and flowing dresses, but the caption made my heart literally stop: “Couldn’t afford the $1,000 dress I wanted, so my mom made this one by hand. She worked on it every night after her two jobs, and I’ve never felt more beautiful or more loved. Sometimes the most expensive thing isn’t the most valuable thing. Love doesn’t have a price tag!”
The post had hundreds of likes and comments. People sharing their own stories about handmade prom dresses, about mothers who sacrificed, and the difference between cost and value.
But the best part came two days later, when Lily showed me a message she’d received from Cassandra: “Since you didn’t wear the dress I bought, I’m sending your mother a bill for $1,000. Clearly the dress went to waste, and someone needs to pay for it.”
Lily screenshotted the message and replied: “You can’t return love like a dress that didn’t fit. My mom already gave me everything I needed. You can have your dress back… I didn’t wear it, and it wasn’t worth my time or attention.” Cassandra blocked Lily on social media that same day.
Mark called later, apologizing for his wife’s behavior, but the damage was done.
I framed Lily’s prom photo and hung it in our hallway, right next to a picture of my mother teaching me to sew when I was eight years old. Every morning when I leave for work, I see both pictures and remember that some things can’t be bought.
Lily starts college in three months. She’s taking the dress with her… not for parties, but because, as she told me, “The best things in life are made with love, not money!”
And me? I’m thinking about taking up sewing again. Turns out, creating something beautiful with your own hands is worth more than any price tag could ever say. Because love isn’t something you can purchase off a rack. It’s something you stitch together, one careful thread at a time, until it fits perfectly around the people who matter most.