I was eighteen years old, and for my graduation, I arrived with the only person who had truly ever been my home: my grandmother.
My mother died when I was born. I never knew my father. And by the time I was old enough to understand what “family” meant, there was no one left by my side… except her.
Her name was Marta.
The woman who held my world together.
My grandmother raised me alone. When I came into this world, she was already past fifty. You could see the exhaustion in her hands and, sometimes, the pain in her back; even so, I never once heard her complain.
At night, she read me stories even when her eyelids were heavy with exhaustion. On Saturdays, she made pancakes even during weeks when money was barely enough. And at every school event, she was there: quietly standing in the back of the room, applauding as if I were the most important person in the universe.
- She gave me stability when no one else could.
- She turned routine into a refuge: books, pancakes, hugs.
- She taught me that dignity doesn’t depend on your job, but on your heart.
The mockery I learned to swallow
To support us, my grandmother worked as a cleaner. And as if fate wanted to make things even more ironic, she worked at the very same school I attended.
That’s when the whispers started. The giggles in the hallways. Comments disguised as “jokes” that were really little blows.
Some hinted that my future would end up “just like hers.” Others made stupid remarks about the smell of my clothes, as if hard work could stain someone. I heard everything. I also saw the looks they exchanged whenever she walked down the hallway pushing her cleaning cart.
I never told her. Not once. It felt unfair to burden her with that pain: she worked honestly to give me a normal life, and I didn’t want her to feel ashamed of something that was actually worthy of respect.
I learned very early that there are silences we keep out of love… until one day they become impossible to carry anymore.