When I turned 18, my grandma gave me a red cardigan — hand-knitted, simple, not expensive.

She had smiled at me anyway, her tired hands resting on her lap, hands that had worked all her life, hands that lovingly knitted warmth into every fiber of that cardigan. I thought it was just yarn. I didn’t realize it was time, effort, and the last piece of her love she could physically give. And I left it folded in a drawer like it meant nothing.

My daughter slipped on the cardigan gently, almost like she understood something I couldn’t at that age. She hugged herself, then hugged me, and whispered, “It feels warm.” I swallowed hard as tears finally came — not out of regret alone, but gratitude.

Gratitude for the chance to see that love isn’t measured by price tags or grand gestures, but by quiet devotion and thoughtfulness. My grandma had given me warmth twice — once through her hands, and now through this message finally reaching my heart.

Continued on next page//