Growing up, my grandma had a strange tradition. Every year on my birthday, she would hand me an old postcard. No toys, no money, no gifts—just a faded postcard with a picture of some faraway place.
I’ll admit, as a kid, I didn’t appreciate it. I would frown, roll my eyes, and toss them in a box. By the time I turned 17, I had 17 postcards. That same year, my grandma passed away.
Life moved on. I grew older, built a career, and eventually found myself back at my childhood home when I was 37. While cleaning, I stumbled across a glass jar tucked away in the attic. Inside were all of Grandma’s postcards.
I picked one up, turned it over—and froze.
Behind the faded pictures, in her delicate handwriting, were carefully written bank account details, numbers, and notes. Each postcard contained information for a savings account she had quietly built in my name.
Seventeen postcards. Seventeen accounts.
Together, they added up to a small fortune—money she had been setting aside year after year, disguised as simple birthday postcards. She had planned it all along, hiding the treasure in plain sight.
In that moment, I realized the postcards weren’t just gifts. They were love letters, investments in my future, and proof of how much she cared even when I didn’t understand.
I sat there holding them, tears in my eyes, whispering a quiet “thank you” to the woman who had given me more than I ever realized.