Three years ago, I missed my flight after going to the wrong terminal. In tears, I met a man who sat beside me, and we talked like old friends. We never exchanged numbers, and I never saw him again.
To my surprise, I later discovered he was someone I should have known.
It was a muggy July morning, and I’d been rushing through the airport like a chicken with my head cut off. The ticket said Terminal B, but I somehow ended up at D, arguing with a vending machine and crying over a stale pack of almonds. I was flying to Phoenix for a job interview that I wasn’t even sure I wanted. My life was a mess back then—underpaid, overworked, recently dumped, and living in a studio with a leaky ceiling.
So when the woman at the gate told me the plane had already departed, I just sank into a chair, holding back the kind of tears that make your throat hurt. That’s when he sat down next to me.
He looked like he belonged in a Patagonia catalog—faded jeans, hiking boots, a canvas backpack that had clearly seen better days. Salt-and-pepper hair, kind eyes. Mid-forties, maybe. He didn’t try to comfort me right away, just sat quietly, sipping from a beat-up thermos.
Then he said, “You missed it too?”
I nodded, wiping my cheeks. “Wrong terminal.”
He laughed softly. “Same. Maybe we’re exactly where we’re supposed to be.”
I gave him a skeptical look, but I was too tired to argue. Somehow, that one sentence cracked something open. We started talking. He asked me about my flight, then my job, then my dreams—like, real dreams. No one had asked me that in years. I told him I used to write poetry in college. That I once thought I’d start a small press. That I hated my corporate job but didn’t know what else to do.
He told me he used to be in finance but walked away from it all after his sister died. He never said her name, just that she’d been a painter and that he couldn’t sit behind a desk anymore knowing she never got to chase what she loved. So he left New York, bought a van, and had been traveling ever since. Freelancing odd jobs. Living light.
I didn’t even catch his name. By the time I realized my cheeks weren’t wet anymore and I’d stopped checking my phone every five seconds, he was standing up, slinging his bag over his shoulder.
“They’ve got me on the next flight,” he said. “But hey… if you ever find yourself in Santa Fe, check out The Blue Finch Café. Good poetry readings on Thursdays. You’d fit right in.”
And just like that, he disappeared into the crowd. I never got his number. Never thought I’d see him again.
Fast forward two years. I didn’t go to Phoenix. I never rescheduled the interview. Instead, I went home and quit my job.
I started freelancing part-time—copywriting, editing—just enough to pay bills. I began writing again. Poetry, short essays, messy ramblings. It felt like stretching muscles that hadn’t moved in years.
On a whim, I took a trip to Santa Fe. It felt silly, chasing some stranger’s throwaway comment. But I remembered how his eyes lit up when he said “Blue Finch.” Like it mattered.
It was a small café on a side street—mismatched furniture, chalkboard menus, books stacked on the window ledges. I didn’t recognize anyone. But the woman behind the counter was warm, and the flyer said “Open Mic Thursday – 7 PM.”
I didn’t plan to read, but somehow I did. I pulled out a poem I’d scribbled on a napkin during my layover and read it with shaky hands. When I finished, a few people clapped. One man stood near the back, arms crossed, nodding slowly.
Later, as I was leaving, he approached me. Not the man from the airport, but someone who introduced himself as Colin, the café’s owner.
He asked if I’d ever considered submitting to literary journals. Said he was starting a small imprint, and he liked my voice. I thought he was just being polite. But he followed up. Asked for more writing. Offered to include me in a zine.
That zine turned into a chapbook. That chapbook got picked up by a micro-press in Portland. Within eighteen months, I had published my first book of poetry.
It never hit the bestseller list or anything. But it mattered. People started messaging me online, saying the poems made them feel seen. That something I wrote helped them cry after years of feeling numb. It was more than I ever expected.
I started teaching weekend workshops. Got invited to read at indie bookstores. And then, one day, I was invited to speak at a tiny writers’ retreat in Taos. The organizer sent the guest list in advance, just for logistics.
And there it was. His name.
Navin Singh.
It didn’t hit me right away. But when I Googled him—my mouth dropped open.
He wasn’t just some guy wandering with a backpack. He was the founder of Lightseed, a once-famous investment firm that had quietly dissolved ten years ago. I’d read about Lightseed in college—how they had invested in social ventures and art foundations. How their founder vanished from the public eye after a family tragedy.
That was him. He had walked away from a multimillion-dollar life without looking back.
When I arrived at the retreat, I wasn’t sure what to expect. But on the second evening, during a group dinner, I saw him.
Same thermos. Same crinkled eyes.
He recognized me first. “Wrong terminal girl,” he said, grinning.
We sat and talked long after everyone else went to bed. This time, we swapped real names. I told him about the café. About my book. About how that one conversation changed everything.
He listened, then said something I still think about:
“You know, it’s not about big breaks. It’s about little nudges. Moments that crack you open just enough.”
We stayed in touch after that. No romance—just a steady, quiet friendship. He sent me prompts when I hit a wall. I mailed him every new piece I wrote. He never gave feedback unless I asked. Just said, “Keep going. It’s honest.”
Last year, something wild happened. An older woman approached me after a reading in Denver. She said her brother used to talk about me. I was confused, until she showed me a photo.
It was Navin. With her—his sister.
“I’m Tali,” she said. “He never stopped talking about the girl at the airport who reminded him of me. Said meeting you helped him heal.”
I stood there stunned. I hadn’t known she was alive. He had always spoken about her like she was gone.
Tali explained that she had gone through a major depressive episode years ago and had been off the radar. For a time, even Navin thought she might’ve ended her life. But she hadn’t. She’d just… needed time. A lot of it.
She returned to the world quietly, and he’d been helping her, keeping her privacy intact.
When he met me, apparently, something shifted in him. Not because I reminded him of her literally—but because I was still fighting for a version of myself he thought he’d lost too.
That shook me. The idea that I could unknowingly reflect something good back to someone at their lowest.
In the spring, I got a call from Colin at Blue Finch. He said a donor had left a generous sum for the café’s reading program—enough to start a writer-in-residence fellowship.
He wouldn’t tell me who the donor was, but I knew.
So here I am now. Living in a little adobe cottage behind the café. Teaching a group of teen poets from the local high school. Working on my second book. And every Thursday night, I light a candle before the open mic starts and leave a seat open near the back.
Some people think you need huge turning points to change your life. But sometimes, it’s just about missing the right flight at the wrong terminal.
That one delay put me exactly where I needed to be.
So if you’re reading this feeling stuck—if you think you’ve missed your shot or wasted too much time—let me say this: you haven’t. Not even close.
Sometimes, the universe sends you a stranger to remind you who you are.
Sometimes, you are that stranger for someone else.
If this moved you even a little, give it a share or a like. Someone out there might need their own little nudge today.