Growing up, I dreaded my birthday—not because I disliked cake or parties, but because of Grandma’s odd “gift.” Each year, she gave me a faded old postcard—dusty scenes, bent corners, forgettable images. I smiled politely at eight, frowned at twelve, rolled my eyes at fifteen. At seventeen, I didn’t even thank her.
She passed away that winter. I cried, then moved on.
Twenty years later, cleaning out her attic, I found a jar holding all 17 postcards. Each was numbered. Curious, I read the first: “The day you were born, I held you and promised to protect your heart when the world couldn’t.”
Another read: “You screamed the whole party at two, but I’ve never seen someone look more powerful covered in cake.”
Each card was a memory, a love note—my story, in her handwriting.
She hadn’t given me junk. She’d preserved my childhood in quiet devotion.
I wept, not in grief, but in awe of the love I’d missed.
Now, the postcards sit framed on my desk—a reminder that love isn’t always loud or obvious. Sometimes, it looks like forgotten paper.
And every time I see them, I whisper, “Thank you, Grandma. I see it now.”