She stops posing like she is trying to take up less space

You can see it in the first photo someone takes at dinner. She is not wedged at the end of the booth with one arm folded across her stomach. She is not doing that half-turn, half-hide pose women learn by accident after years of seeing bad pictures of themselves.
Her shoulders are back. Her chin is level. When the phone comes up, she does not scramble into the safe smile or bend one knee like she is trying to disappear politely. She lets the picture take all of her in.
Same dress, same face, same hair maybe. Still, the shot feels different because she has stopped arranging herself like she is asking not to be noticed.
The room starts reacting before anyone admits she changed

The first signs are small enough that people can pretend they missed them. A man forgets where his sentence was going. Someone across the table looks at her outfit, looks away, then checks again while reaching for her glass.
Then comes the casual line that is never as casual as it sounds: “Wait, you look different.” Too quick. Too flat. Like the person heard it leave their mouth and tried to make it smaller.
Her loud friend goes quiet for a beat. The group chat gets one extra heart on the photo. Nobody announces that anything has changed, but the room starts behaving like it has.



