My grandma would only give me one old postcard for my birthdays. I would frown and roll my eyes, wondering why she couldn’t give me something “normal” like toys or money.
I was 17 when she died.
Twenty years later, at 37, I returned to my childhood home. In the attic, I found a glass jar filled with all 17 postcards she had given me. I almost laughed at the sight of them, but something made me pick one up.
On the back, in her neat handwriting, was a message I had never noticed before.
It wasn’t just a sweet note—it was a clue.
Each card had a sentence, and when I laid them all out in order, they formed a hidden message: “For my beloved grandchild, I’ve saved for your future. Look under the oak tree in the garden.”
My hands shook as I ran outside. Beneath the old oak tree, buried deep under the roots, was a weathered tin box. Inside were bonds, cash, and family jewelry—enough to change my life.
I cried as I realized she had been giving me a treasure all along, disguised as something simple.
What I once dismissed as “just postcards” turned out to be the greatest gift of love and foresight my grandma could ever give.