When I was little, every summer meant one thing — Grandma’s farmhouse. It smelled like baked bread, fresh hay, and safety. Those were the happiest days of my childhood.
But one night changed everything.
I remember being told to go to my room early. My parents said they had a “grown-up matter” to discuss with Grandma. I didn’t think much of it then — I was maybe nine — but I could hear muffled voices through the walls. They weren’t angry, just… tense. My mom cried quietly. My dad said almost nothing.
The next morning, the air in the house felt different. Grandma looked tired but smiled at me anyway, pretending everything was fine. When it was time to leave, she hugged me longer than usual. That was the last time we ever visited her farmhouse.
After that summer, every time I asked why we didn’t go back, my parents would change the subject. “Grandma’s busy,” they’d say, or “It’s not a good time.” Eventually, I stopped asking.
Years later, when I was in my twenties, I overheard my aunt talking about her — and that’s how I finally found out the truth.
Grandma had been diagnosed with Alzheimer’s shortly after that night. My parents had discovered she’d been forgetting to turn off the stove, wandering outside at night, even calling relatives who’d passed away years ago. They didn’t want me to remember her that way — confused, scared, and slowly fading.
For years, they tried to protect me from the pain. But when I learned what really happened, it broke my heart — not out of anger, but out of love. Because all I could think about was that last hug. How tightly she held me, as if a part of her knew she wouldn’t remember me next summer.
Now, every time I smell baked bread, I think of her — my Grandma, who loved me deeply, even when her mind began to forget. 💔