When I was younger, I never understood my grandmother’s way of loving me. Every birthday, while my friends unwrapped boxes filled with gadgets, clothes, or cash, I would receive the same thing: a single, faded postcard. No explanation, no envelope filled with money—just a small rectangle of paper with a picture on one side and a few handwritten lines on the other. I remember forcing a polite smile while disappointment settled quietly inside me. To a teenager, it felt like she wasn’t trying hard enough, like I didn’t matter as much as everyone else. I never said it out loud, but I carried that feeling with me year after year.
When she passed away, I was seventeen—still too young to fully understand people, but old enough to regret the moments I had taken for granted. Life moved forward the way it always does. I went to college, built a career, and filled my days with responsibilities. The postcards became distant memories, tucked somewhere in the back of my mind. It wasn’t until twenty years later, at thirty-seven, that I returned to my childhood home to sort through what was left behind. The house felt smaller, quieter, as if time itself had softened everything.
While going through an old cabinet in her bedroom, I found a small glass jar tucked behind a stack of books. Inside were seventeen postcards—one for every birthday I had shared with her. My heart tightened as I carefully took them out, one by one. They looked exactly as I remembered: simple, worn, almost ordinary. But this time, I turned one over and really looked. Beneath her familiar handwriting, I noticed something I had never paid attention to before—a small date written in the corner, along with a note about where she had been when she chose that card. Some mentioned places I had never heard of, others described small moments: a rainy afternoon, a quiet train ride, a bench in a park.
As I read through them, I realized what they truly were. They weren’t just postcards—they were pieces of her life, collected over time and saved for me. Each one held a memory, a place she had seen, a moment she had thought was worth sharing. She hadn’t been giving me something small; she had been giving me a part of her world, year after year. Standing there in that quiet room, I finally understood that love doesn’t always arrive in the way we expect. Sometimes it’s quiet, patient, and easy to overlook—until one day, you see it clearly, and it changes everything.