Meet Allie

I’ve always believed I was meant for more.

Not in the sense of titles or achievements, but in the quiet feeling that my story was meant to matter—that somehow the experiences I had lived through would one day become part of something bigger than myself.

I was born with one arm, and from an early age I learned how to adapt, persevere, and move through a world that often reminded me I was different. But long before I understood it, I was also learning resilience.

Life would ask even more of me.

When my son was just two years old and I was 12 weeks pregnant with my identical twin daughters, my husband lost his battle with leukemia. In a moment, the life I thought I was building changed forever.

There were seasons of survival. Seasons of carrying more than I thought I could. Seasons where I poured everything I had into everyone else and slowly lost pieces of myself along the way.

And somewhere underneath motherhood, grief, responsibility, and simply trying to make it through, I kept feeling the same quiet pull:

There has to be more.

Not more things. More purpose. More meaning. More alignment.

For years I dreamed of becoming self-employed. I wanted to build something of my own and create a life that felt authentic and meaningful. But I kept asking myself the same question:

What special skill do I even have to offer?

Then one day I realized something that changed everything:

I was my special skill.

Not because my life was perfect. Not because I had all the answers. But because I understood what it felt like to rebuild yourself. To rediscover yourself. To stand in front of a mirror and wonder where you went.

What began with wigs and confidence became something much deeper. I discovered that style, color, self-expression, and the way we see ourselves are never really about clothes or hair.

They’re about identity.

They’re about reconnecting with yourself.

They’re about becoming the version of yourself that has been waiting beneath survival mode all along.

And that’s why I created Your Mirror Moment.

Because I believe every woman deserves the chance to see herself again—and maybe even discover parts of herself she never knew were there.