My son looked at me one afternoon and said, “Mommy, when you were a little girl and I was a man, we danced in the garden behind the white tree.” My heart stopped. The only person I ever danced with in that garden was my grandfather. His backyard had a giant white oak that watched over our happiest moments. When I was six or seven, he’d turn on his old radio, hold out his hand, and we’d dance barefoot in the grass. It was our secret joy—simple, magical, and only ours.
I never told anyone about those afternoons. Not my parents, not friends—no one. After my grandfather passed, that memory became a private treasure I tucked away. So how could my five-year-old son know something he never witnessed? I asked softly, “What else do you remember?” He smiled and said, “You wore a yellow dress.
I spun you, and you laughed. You told me never to let you go.” My knees weakened. I remembered that exact moment—the yellow sundress, tripping mid-spin, my grandfather catching me, and my whispered, “Don’t let me go.” His reply had been gentle and sure: “I never will.”
Tears filled my eyes as my son reached up to wipe my cheek, as if he understood. Maybe it was imagination—or maybe love threads itself through time, finding its way back to us. I hugged him tightly and whispered, “Thank you for remembering.” That night, I felt a quiet peace. Some bonds don’t end; they simply return in new forms. Perhaps love truly never lets us go.