Grandma Left Us Matching Blue Boxes—My Sister Opened Hers And Froze-Teptep

My late grandmother left two identical blue velvet boxes for my sister and me, and my sister gasped when she opened hers.

For six years, I lived by my grandmother’s needs more than my own.

There were tablets in little plastic compartments, blankets folded over the arm of her chair, appointments written on scraps of paper, and a wheelchair parked so carefully by the front door that I could reach it in the dark.

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Her dementia did not arrive all at once.

It crept in politely at first, misplacing a word here, a date there, the name of a neighbour she had known for thirty years.

Then it took more.

Some mornings, she remembered me before I had even said hello.

She would look up from her mug of tea, eyes bright for one brief shining second, and say my name as if she had found something precious down the back of the sofa.

Other mornings, she stared at me like I was someone from the council come to inspect the place.

“Who are you?” she would ask, clutching her cardigan closed.

“It’s me, Gran,” I would say.

I learned not to let my face fall.

You become very good at being cheerful when somebody you love is frightened of you.

Her kitchen became the centre of our world.

The kettle clicked on and off all day.

A tea towel hung over the oven handle.

There was always a washing-up bowl in the sink, always a blanket sliding from her knees, always a small task waiting to be done before I could sit down.

I washed her sheets when she had accidents.

I helped her dress when her hands forgot buttons.

I cut her food into smaller pieces.

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