
I used to think my grandma was stingy because she never joined us when the family went out to restaurants. She always stayed home and said she wasn’t hungry. After she passed, a woman came to us in tears and said, “Did you know that she used to buy my kids groceries every month for three years?”
We stood there, stunned.
I looked at my mom, then at my uncle, and both of them seemed just as shocked as I was. None of us had ever heard of this woman, yet here she was, holding a worn-out photo of her children and speaking through sobs. She told us her name was Janine.
She used to live three blocks away, in a run-down apartment behind the church. Her husband had left when the kids were little. She had no family, no job at first, and barely enough to keep the lights on.
One day, Grandma Lourdes saw her sitting on the curb with a crying baby and a grocery bag that had only a loaf of bread and two apples in it. Without asking too many questions, Grandma handed her an envelope with fifty dollars inside and a note that read, “Feed them. They deserve more.”
That first act of kindness turned into something much bigger.
Grandma never told anyone about it. She would just say she was going for a walk or that she needed air. Sometimes, she’d say she was going to the market but come back empty-handed.
Turns out, she was filling Janine’s pantry, paying for utilities some months, and even slipping toys into their mailbox during Christmas. I couldn’t believe it. All those times I thought she just didn’t like eating out with us or didn’t care to spend time, she was choosing to quietly serve someone who had nothing.
And that wasn’t the only surprise. After the funeral, people kept showing up. A man in a wheelchair told us she used to stop by the nursing home once a week just to play checkers with him.
A teenager said she helped him with his college application and gave him her late husband’s old briefcase as a “good luck” gift. We were floored. It was like slowly discovering that someone you thought you knew had a secret double life—not in a bad way, but in the most humbling, beautiful way possible.
When we started going through her things, we found little handwritten journals. Nothing fancy. Just small spiral notebooks with dates and short lines like: “Paid electric bill for J.” or “Dropped off fresh bread and soup.” Sometimes she just wrote “Waved to lonely man on porch.
He smiled back.”
She never wrote those things to brag. It was like she needed to record them to keep her heart aligned or to remind herself that small things mattered. She even kept a list titled “People to pray for when I can’t sleep.” My name was on it.
So was my dad’s. So was Janine. I remember one day I got frustrated with her because she refused to let me buy her a new pair of shoes.
The soles on hers were worn thin, and I offered to take her shopping. She just laughed and said, “These shoes have more to walk.” I was annoyed. I thought she was just being difficult, but now I get it.
She didn’t want to take when she could give. As the days passed, I began to see her life in a whole new light. I started retracing her steps in our neighborhood.
The story doesn’t end here — it continues on the next page.
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