AFTER READING REGRETTING YOU by Colleen Hoover - 9 Lessons I Learned About Family, First Love, Grief, and Forgiveness There’s a peculiar thing about family. We imagine it as a constant—a place where rules are clear, roles are fixed, and love is a given. But when you look closely, you realize that family is more like a series of shifting alliances. Parents and children are not bound solely by blood, but by the daily negotiations of trust, unspoken expectations, and the fragile belief that we know each other completely. And yet, in moments of upheaval, those beliefs can crumble in seconds. Regretting You, at its core, is a story about two people—a mother and a daughter—who think they understand their place in each other’s lives. Morgan, the mother, believes she has shielded her daughter from the mistakes she once made. Clara, the daughter, believes her mother’s caution is overprotection. Both are wrong. When tragedy strikes, their tidy, if sometimes tense, arrangement collapses, replaced by a chasm filled with questions they never imagined needing to ask. What makes this collapse so unsettling is that it is not born of malice. No one sets out to dismantle the trust between them. Grab a copy of this book now!