My mother wore the same charcoal-gray coat for thirty winters. As a child, I was embarrassed by it. The elbows were worn thin, the cuffs frayed, and the buttons didn’t match. When I was a teenager, I’d ask her to drop me off a block from school so no one would see it. She would just smile and say, “It keeps the cold out, baby. That’s all that matters.” Years later, after becoming an architect, I bought her a beautiful cashmere coat. She thanked me, hung it in the closet—and wore the old one the next morning.
We argued about that coat many times. I told her she deserved better. She would only say she couldn’t throw it away. When she passed away unexpectedly at sixty, during the coldest week of winter, the coat was still hanging by the door. After the funeral, I returned to her apartment to pack her things. As I lifted it from the hook, I noticed it felt heavier than it should.
Inside the lining were hidden pockets she had sewn herself. Tucked inside were thirty numbered envelopes. The first began, “Dear Jimmy, when you find these, I’ll be gone. Please read them all.” They were letters to my father, Robin—the man she loved who left for a job abroad before I was born. On the day he left, he wrapped that very coat around her shoulders. Weeks later, she learned she was pregnant. She wrote to him but never heard back.
Years later, she discovered he had died in a work accident shortly after leaving. He never knew about me. For thirty years, she wrote him a letter every anniversary—about my first steps, my school awards, my life. The coat wasn’t about poverty. It was the last thing that had held the man she loved. I once saw rags. Now I see proof of a love that endured.