- I saw No Doubt open for David Bowie in Brazil in 1997.
- Almost 30 years later, I went to see No Doubt at the Sphere in Las Vegas.
- It was both a reminder about getting old, but also of still being myself even after all these years.
My family had just moved to Brazil, and I had to beg my parents to let me go to a music festival with all of my new high school friends. It was going to be the first time I'd be going to a show without them supervising me.
They were reluctant, but after chatting with other parents, they all agreed that it was time for my group of 13-year-old girlfriends to experience some independence. So they dropped us off at the stadium's door and told us to be back by midnight.
I was thrilled. I was seeing my favorite band, No Doubt. My friends were thrilled about the main act, David Bowie.
Almost 30 years later, I saw No Doubt again at The Sphere.
I took a solo trip
When I saw that No Doubt was coming back with a residency at The Sphere, I was thrilled. Not only had I been wanting to go to The Sphere for a show, but having No Doubt play felt like a full circle.
I left my three kids and my husband at home and decided to make it a girls' trip with one of my best friends. That alone made me feel like I was a teenager again.
We planned fancy meals and pool hangs to catch up around the main event. It was refreshing not to have to think about snacks, carry water bottles, or deal with meltdowns for a couple of days. It really made me feel like myself again, and not just a mom.
The anticipation had me on edge
On days leading up to the show, my nerves were at an all-time high. I prepped outfits (with checkered Vans included, of course) and looked at prices of merch online to see what I wanted to get.
I also saw online that people were complaining about the set list, but after finding it on Apple Music, I was confused about what the criticism was. This show was OG No Doubt. The same No Doubt I saw back in the 90s.
Of course, some things had changed, though. Gwen Stefani's religious statements disappointed some longtime fans, who felt she was choking on her contradictions. Tom Dumont shared he was diagnosed with parkinson's shortly after the band announced the residency.
There was no doubt (pun intended) that we weren't young anymore.
The show was the first one to make me cry
The Venetian hotel, which connects to The Sphere, was packed with women around my age in their best 90s punk outfits. There were tons of plaid, space buns, checkered Vans left and right, and so much excitement.
The Sphere is a wild experience on its own. Walking into the general admission area took my breath away. It's huge, a little overwhelming, but totally impressive. The screens projected images of the band from decades earlier, along with posters and mementos from their earlier shows.
When the band came on, right on time, and the first chords of the guitars blasted (it is very loud in there), my entire body turned into a giant goosebump. It was happening, all the anticipation, and all these decades had passed; I was experiencing them again, live.
It was the first time ever that I've cried at a show. All the memories of what the band has gotten me through, the heartbreaks, the indecisions, the feeling like I never really fit in, in the expectation that people had of me.
But here I was, married, with kids, with a job, in a country that I never imagined in a million years would give me citizenship, and for a second, I felt like I made it. After all these years, despite going to the beat of my own drum, I became who I was meant to be.
I left the venue with no voice, exhausted legs, but ready to do it all over again the next day. Turns out that 13-year-old me and 43-year-old me are so different, yet so the same.
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Conz Preti doesn't just cover the stories that matter to modern families — she shapes them.An award-winning editor and author with over 15 years in digital media, Conz has built a career at the intersection of parenting, health, and culture. Armed with a master's in digital journalism from Columbia University, her byline has appeared across the publications millennials turn to most — and her editorial instincts have shaped countless more stories behind the scenes.She's the author of "Too Pregnant To Move" and a contributing voice in "100 Diverse Voices on Parenthood" — because she doesn't just edit the conversation around modern parenting, she's part of it. As Deputy Editor, she leads a team of editors and reporters, and works with endless freelancers covering parenting, health, college life, and sex and relationships.Originally from Argentina and a mom of three under 8, Conz brings lived experience and sharp editorial vision to every room she walks into.Some of her viral essays are:
- My 8-year-old invited his 4 best friends to dinner. I sat at a separate table and watched them have fun independently.
- We gave our kids only my husband's last name. Years later I regretted it, so we changed them all to include mine.
- My toddler wanted to be a sand dune for Halloween. I asked a costume expert for help and the results didn't disappoint.
- I realized I was spending over $2,000 a year to get my builder gel nails. I decided to stop and save that money.
- I got my kids, all 7 and under, a landline. They invited friends over on a snow day without my help, and I was thrilled.
- A mom of identical twins said she had to go to the police to tell her babies apart. As a parent of twins, here's how I avoid mix-ups.Besides creating viral content, Conz was also the editor behind these powerful stories:
- I stopped being the first to reach out to friends. It made me realize I don't need to be liked by everyone.
- My toddler came out as trans at age 4. He's so much happier now.
- Long-term elder care in the US can cost 5-figures a month. These families are moving to Mexico for cheaper options.
- Boomers seem to have traded in the child-raising village for traveling. Now millennial parents say they have no one to support them.
- I moved with my kids to a hotel room. It's cheaper than renting an apartment and has many amenities
- My 11-year-old walked less than a mile away from home. I was arrested and charged with reckless conduct.














