When I turned 18, my grandma handed me a red cardigan she had knitted stitch by stitch. It was the only gift she could afford, and she’d worked on it for weeks. I remember smiling politely, saying a flat “Thanks,” thinking it was just another handmade sweater I’d never wear.
She passed away only weeks later.
Life moved on. The cardigan stayed folded in the back of my closet for years, untouched, forgotten… a reminder I didn’t want to confront.
Fast-forward to last week. My daughter, now 15, was digging through old boxes when she held it up.
“Mom, this is beautiful. Can I try it?”
She slipped it on, twirling with a smile I hadn’t seen in ages. Then she froze.
“Mom… what’s this?”
She reached into one of the pockets and pulled out a tiny, folded piece of paper — yellowed with age, perfectly preserved.
My heart dropped.
With shaking hands, I opened it.
Inside, in my grandmother’s delicate handwriting, were just a few lines:
“If you’re reading this, it means you finally tried it on. I made this for you with every bit of love I had left. Whenever life feels heavy, wear this and remember: you were my joy. Always.”
I sat down on the floor and cried — the kind of cry that comes from years of unspoken guilt and love.
My daughter knelt beside me, wrapping her arms — and the cardigan — around my shoulders.
“I think she knew you’d need this someday,” she whispered.
And she was right.