I handed her the emergency pad I always carry, and she rushed to the bathroom.
Five minutes later, the flight attendant came over and said, “Sir, your daughter… she’s asking for you.”
My stomach flipped. I unbuckled and hurried to the back. The attendant pointed toward the lavatory. I knocked gently.
“It’s me, sweetheart.”
“Dad, I—I think I bled through my pants,” her voice cracked behind the door. “It’s so bad. I don’t want to come out.”
I could hear the tears in her voice. My heart broke. She’s thirteen. This was only her second period, and of course it had to happen on a cramped flight to Milwaukee with no spare clothes in reach.
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I turned to the attendant, whose name tag read Soraya, and quietly explained. Without hesitation, she nodded and disappeared. A minute later, she came back with a long-sleeved airline crew sweatshirt and whispered, “She can tie this around her waist.”
I passed it under the door.
She opened the door a sliver and took it, her eyes red and face flushed with embarrassment. A few more minutes, and she finally came out, sweatshirt tied low around her hips.
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“I ruined my jeans,” she whispered.
“No, honey. You just grew up a little more. That’s all.” I put my arm around her, and she leaned into me.
Soraya gave her a smile and slipped her a little pouch discreetly. “Just in case,” she said. It had pads, wipes, even a chocolate bar.
Back in our seats, my daughter—Tallis—rested her head on my shoulder.
“Thanks, Dad.”
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We didn’t speak much for the rest of the flight, but she held my hand the whole time.
The next morning in Milwaukee, we were getting ready for my cousin’s wedding. Tallis was quiet. She kept tugging at her dress and avoiding the mirror.
“Want to talk about it?” I asked.
“I feel… gross. What if I leak again? What if someone sees?”
I knelt down and looked her straight in the eyes.
“You’re not gross. You’re just human. I promise, no one’s looking for leaks. Everyone’s too busy trying to keep their Spanx from rolling down and their mascara from smudging.”
That got a little smile.
At the wedding, everything was going fine—until one of the teenage cousins, Esmé, came over with a smirk.
“You brought your daughter to a real wedding? Isn’t she, like, a baby?”
Tallis tensed up beside me. Esmé was thirteen too, but clearly had a chip on her shoulder and a TikTok account that made her feel older than she was.
Before I could say anything, Tallis spoke up.
“I’m not a baby. I’m just not insecure enough to pretend I’m an adult.”
The girl blinked. I almost laughed. Esmé mumbled something and walked off.
“Where did that come from?” I asked.
“I don’t know,” Tallis said. “But it felt good.”
We were making real progress. That night, we danced. She even let herself laugh, full-on belly laugh, when I tripped doing the electric slide.
The twist came the next day, as we were packing to leave.
I found a note slipped into Tallis’s suitcase.
It was from Soraya, the flight attendant.
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“To Tallis—
You handled yourself with more grace than most grown women would.
Periods are part of your strength, not something to hide.
The first time it happened to me, I was on a school field trip in white shorts. I cried for an hour.
Now I fly planes in heels and carry tampons like armor.
You’re going to be amazing.
– Soraya”
Tallis read it three times before saying anything.
“I want to write her back.”
I helped her write a short thank-you and mailed it to the airline, hoping it might somehow reach her.
Two months later, we got a letter back.
It was from Soraya’s supervisor, saying that Soraya had been nominated for an internal award for kindness and professionalism, partly thanks to our letter.
They included a small voucher for us to fly again—“On us, this time.”
Tallis beamed. “Do you think we’ll see her again?”
“Maybe. Or maybe you’ll be someone’s Soraya one day.”
The lesson?
Life throws you into awkward, uncomfortable moments—especially as a parent. You don’t always get it right. But if you show up, if you listen, if you care, you become a safe place for someone.
Tallis won’t remember the specifics of that flight. But she’ll remember that she wasn’t alone.
And maybe one day, she’ll pass that strength to someone else.