She explained that she hadn’t told me because she didn’t want my last memories of her to be hospital machines and oxygen tubes. She didn’t want my children to associate her with fear or weakness. “I wanted you to remember my laughter,” she wrote.
“My Sunday mornings in the kitchen. The way I danced with you when you were little. I didn’t want my leaving to weigh heavier than it already would.”
I read that line again and again.
The anger I’d carried softened. She hadn’t rejected me—she had been trying, in her own imperfect way, to protect me, even at the cost of saying goodbye properly. In the weeks that followed, I replayed that afternoon at her door: the tremble in her voice, the way she looked like she wanted to say more but held back.
Maybe she was sparing me another burden. Maybe she thought there would be more time. Now, when I wrap my children in the blankets she made, I tell them about their grandmother: strong in quiet ways, loving even when she couldn’t show it perfectly.
I tell them about Sunday pancakes, off-key singing, and the gentle squeeze of her hand when I was afraid. Every night, after they fall asleep, I fold her tiny sweaters with care and whisper into the dark:
“I’m sorry, Mom. I understand now.”
