One ordinary afternoon, my son looked at me with wide, innocent eyes and said, “Mommy, when you were a little girl and I was a man,
we danced in the garden behind the white tree.” My heart froze. That memory was mine alone—shared only with my late grandfather.
When I was six, his backyard was my sanctuary. A tall white oak stood guard as he played his old crackling radio, took my hand, and spun me barefoot
in the grass. After his death, I kept those moments hidden, never telling anyone. Yet here was my five-year-old son describing them in detail.
Smiling, he added, “You wore a yellow dress. I spun you, and you told me never to let you go.” My knees shook,
because it was true. I remembered stumbling, laughing, begging, “Don’t let me go.” And my grandfather whispering, “I never will.”
Hearing my son echo those exact words decades later felt like stepping back into that moment, embraced by a love I thought was gone.
I held my boy close, overwhelmed with wonder. Maybe it was imagination—or maybe proof that
love transcends time. Some bonds never break. Love, I realized, always finds its way back.