Grandma Knew Best After All

**Diary Entry**

I suppose Gran was right all along. It took years before Emily finally made up her mind. After her beloved grandmothers funeral, something inside her shifted. She pulled out her phone, looked up the train schedule, and booked a ticket back to her hometown. It was time to face the past, once and for all.

The train raced through endless fields and woods, familiar scenes from childhood flashing by. Emily stared out the window, lost in thought. Maybe it *was* worth trying to forgive her mother. Gran had always said forgiveness lightened the burden of old wounds, letting you move forward.

Her heart pounded as the train pulled into the small station of her hometown. Her steps faltered, as if her legs resisted going further. She moved slowly, mechanically, pausing every few paces to steady herself.

Then, there it wasthe little wooden cottage where shed once lived, where her mother had later died. The place looked derelict: windows covered in yellowed newspapers, shutters creaking in the wind. Emilys chest ached as memories flooded backhappy moments with her father and brothers, the only threads still tying her to this place. A heavy padlock hung on the door, rusted with age. One tug, and the whole thing might crumble. But she didnt try. Instead, she sank onto the rickety porch and sat there for hours, turning everything over in her mind. Then, abruptly, she stood and walked back to the station. Did she feel lighter? Yes. The weight had lifted, the grudges finally let go.

A decade ago, Emily had sat hunched over her computer, her mind miles awayback in a childhood that had turned sour. Her fingers fiddled with an old school pen, twisting it absently.

Her father was gone forever, leaving behind three children and a wife drowning in grief. Emily remembered it sharplythe stale reek of cheap whiskey, her mothers endless tears, her older brothers constant complaints. And her, a bewildered five-year-old clinging to Grans knees, feeling utterly alone. No more bedtime stories, no more gentle hands smoothing her hair. *Why then?* shed often wondered. Why did life take him when they needed him most?

And now, after all these years, the news cameher mother was dead.
*”Are you even going to the funeral?”* Grans voice was sharp, her arms crossed, her face lined with disappointment.
Emily looked up from the screen, her gaze icy. *”Why should I? I hated her! That woman the drink turned her into a monster who couldnt care less about her own daughter!”*
*”She was your mother,”* Gran snapped. *”Even if things were bad, you owe her some respect.”*
*”Respect?”* Emily scoffed. *”After Dad died, she couldnt even look after us! You and Aunt Mabel had to step in. She chose the bottle over her own kids!”*
Gran sighed, struggling for words. *”Maybe she was suffering. Grief broke her.”*
*”Suffering?”* Emily gave a bitter laugh. *”Plenty of people suffer and still do right by their children. She just gave up.”*

The memories stung. Years of neglect, indifference, simmering rage. Her mother had never cared about her childrens lives, their ups or downs. The pain twisted inside Emily, sharp and hateful.

Her father had always smoothed things over, but without him, life became unbearable. Aunt Mabel stepped in, moving them all to her house in Manchester. A fresh startnew school, new faces.

Yet thoughts of her mother haunted Emily, stirring shame alongside the anger. How could she feel this way about her own mother? Didnt a mothers love mean something, no matter what?

But reality always rushed backthe nights shed cried herself to sleep, feeling abandoned. The wounds never healed.

Gran had rested a hand on her shoulder then. *”I understand, love, I do. But sometimes saying goodbye helps. Maybe going back will let you forgive her. At least try.”*
*”No,”* Emily had said flatly. *”I wont.”*

Now Gran was gone too.

Emily returned from her hometown, turning it all over in her mind. The memories of her childhoodgood and badrose up again, filling the hollow space her fathers death had left. She wanted to leave the bitterness behind, to start anew.

Gran had been right. Forgiveness wasnt for her motherit was for *her*. A way to shed the pasts weight and step forward unburdened. Thered be challenges ahead, but now she felt ready to face them, open to whatever came next.

That trip had changed everything. Some grudges arent worth carrying. And now, at last, she could remember the good without the poison of the past.

**Lesson learned:** Holding onto anger only chains you down. Letting go? Thats freedom.

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