I raised my son alone and poured everything I had into him—even my retirement savings. But a simple toy walkie-talkie from my grandson exposed a truth I never imagined: all my sacrifices meant far less to the man I raised. Mothers who have given everything for their families need to hear this.
You spend your whole life giving, believing love will guarantee love in return. But sometimes, love only makes you easier to use. My name is Annie, I’m 60 years old, and I’ve always believed that family comes first.
My husband died when our son, Thomas, was just seven. After that, I scrubbed floors, washed dishes, and worked double shifts just to feed us and pay the bills. My grandson Max is four—soft curls, a raspy giggle, and a way of brightening even the hardest day.
A week ago, he held up one of his little plastic walkie-talkies with sticky fingers and said, “Grandma Annie, this is for you!”
“What’s this for, sweetheart?”
“So we can talk even when I’m in my bedroom! You just press this button and say my name!”
I clipped it to my apron strings. “I love it, baby.”
He wrapped his small arms around my legs.
Through the thin wall, I heard Lila calling him home. We live right next door to each other in Skyridge Apartments—same hallway, same familiar creaks in the floorboards. Five years ago, when Lila was pregnant with Max, I helped them buy that place.
“So our boy can grow up close to his grandma!” both Thomas and Lila had said with tears in their eyes. I gave them $40,000 from my retirement savings. It was a painful amount, but I didn’t hesitate.
I believed then that being close to family mattered more than money could ever measure. Most evenings, you’ll find me in the back of Murphy’s Diner, wrists deep in hot, soapy water. My hands are always cracked and raw, but bills don’t stop coming.
When Thomas asked if I could help pay for Max’s daycare, I didn’t even blink. Even though I was struggling myself, I said yes. Because when you love someone, you make it work.
“Mom, it’s $800 a month,” he explained last winter. “We’re really struggling.”
So I sent the money every month without fail. My grandson deserved the best care, even if it meant stretching myself impossibly thin.
Last Wednesday night, I came home after a 10-hour shift. My feet ached, my back throbbed, and I collapsed into my old recliner with a long sigh. Then, suddenly, static crackled from the walkie-talkie on my apron.
“Daddy, are you there?” Max’s sleepy voice drifted through. I smiled at the sound. But then I heard other voices.
Adult voices. Lila’s laugh—sharp and calculating. “Honestly, Thomas, we should rent out her spare bedroom.
She’s never home anyway.”
Everything around me seemed to fade as I pressed the walkie-talkie closer. “We could easily get $600 a month for that room!” Lila continued. “She wouldn’t even notice with all those evening shifts.”
Thomas chuckled lightly.
“Mom’s too trusting. Always has been.”
“Speaking of trust,” Lila chirped, “once she starts paying for Max’s swimming lessons too, we can finally take that trip to Hawaii. She’ll babysit for free.”
My body went still, frozen by a deep, hollow ache that made it hard to breathe.
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