I’ve lived long enough to recognize that grief doesn’t leave when a person does. It lingers quietly, settling into corners, into habits, into the spaces between words. It waits. Sometimes it softens. Sometimes it sharpens. But it never truly disappears.
My name is Ruth, and I saw that truth unfold inside my own home.
My grandson Liam is nine. He lives with me and his father, my son Daniel. Two years ago, we lost Liam’s mother, Emily, to cancer. She had a way of warming a room without trying, the kind of presence you only realize the full weight of once it’s gone.
When she died, Liam didn’t break the way people expect children to. There were no loud outbursts, no dramatic grief. Instead, something inside him dimmed slowly, almost invisibly.
But I noticed.
He stopped running to the door when someone knocked. He stopped asking for things the way children do. He didn’t laugh the same. It was as if he quietly folded himself inward and decided to take up less space in the world.
The only thing he held onto were Emily’s sweaters.
She had knitted them herself—soft, imperfect, still carrying the faint scent of lavender detergent she loved. Liam kept them in a box in his room. Sometimes he would sit with them, not playing, not crying, just… sitting.
About a year later, Daniel remarried.
Claire.
I wanted to welcome her. I truly did. But from the beginning, she made it clear those sweaters didn’t belong in what she liked to call “her home.”
Daniel kept asking for patience. “She’s adjusting,” he’d say. “She’s not used to kids.”
So I stayed quiet—for Liam.
Then, a few weeks before Easter, something shifted.
Liam walked into the kitchen holding a small, uneven bunny. One ear longer than the other, stitches slightly crooked. He held it carefully, like it mattered.
“I made this for kids in the hospital,” he said. “So they don’t feel lonely.”
My throat tightened.
When I asked why a bunny, he gave me the smallest smile I’d seen in months.
“Mom used to call me her bunny.”
That was all it took.