My son died in an accident at 16. My husband, Sam, never shed a tear. Our family fell apart and we ended up divorcing. Sam remarried, and 12 years later, he died.
Days later, his wife came to see me. She sat down, her hands trembling, and said, “It’s time you know the truth. Sam had a box. He asked me to give it to you when he was gone.”
Confused, I opened the worn wooden box. Inside were letters. Dozens of them. All written in Sam’s handwriting. All addressed to our son.
Every birthday. Every holiday. Every anniversary of the accident. He had written to him, pouring out his grief, his guilt, his heartbreak. He wrote about how much he missed him, how he couldn’t forgive himself for letting it happen, how every day felt empty without him.
Tears blurred my vision as I read the words. The man I thought had felt nothing… had been grieving in silence all along.
His wife whispered, “He didn’t want you to see his pain. He thought he had to be strong. But he never stopped loving your son. Or you.”
For the first time in years, I cried—not just for my boy, but for the love Sam carried to his last breath.