05/18/2026
One of the most meaningful parts of this project was giving women space to tell their own stories in their own words.
This is Sherry’s story. 🤍…
“I’ve learned that life doesn’t hand out manuals. Not for being a wife, not for being a mother, not for carrying the weight of a family on your back while still trying to keep your own heart steady.
So I moved through the world the only way I knew how— shaped by the people who raised me, guided by the examples I had, doing my best even when my best was imperfect.
If I stumbled, it was never out of harm. If I failed, it was never out of indifference. Everything I did was rooted in love— messy, human, earnest love.
And when the storms came, when the ground shook beneath me, I found myself leaning harder into God. My faith didn’t just return; it deepened, as if every trial had been a quiet preparation for the strength I would need later.
Now, at sixty six, with forty six years of marriage etched into my bones, I see life differently. Gratitude comes easier— for family who still gathers, for friends who stand like pillars, for a community that feels like home.
I’m not done yet. There is still something in me worth giving— a lesson, a story, a warning, a hand on someone’s shoulder so they don’t repeat the mistakes I made.
If I can lead by example, if I can steady someone else’s path, then the hard years weren’t just hardship. They were shaping. They were preparation. They were grace in disguise.”
-Sherry Maston