All throughout my childhood, I believed my granddad Harold was the wisest man I knew. He moved slowly, had large, rough hands, and hardly ever spokebut when he did, everyone listened.
He lived in a little wooden cottage at the edge of a quiet English village, surrounded by hens, old tools, and a creaky armchair that groaned every time he sat down. Wed spend our weekends there. Thats also where I discovered something my mum had never told me: my granddad couldnt read.
I found out on an ordinary Saturday.
I was eight at the time and had brought along a storybook. I placed it in his hands and said,
Granddad, will you read it to me? I want to hear it in your voice.
He held my gaze. Swallowed hard. Then said,
Why dont we read it together?
That became his trick for years.
Someone was always there to read for him. Mum handled his paperwork. The GP explained everything aloud. At the bank theyd say, Ah, you know what Mr. Harolds likehe keeps it all in his head.
But the truth wasnt that he remembered everything.
It was that he covered it all up.
One day, when he was 76, he fell off the shed roof while fixing a leaky gutter. Nothing too serious, but while he was in hospital, he told me something I never expected.
I want you to teach me to read, he said.
Me? I asked.
Yes. No one is as patient as you are. And your handwriting is lovely.
So, we startedfirst with letters, then syllables, then words.
He grew frustrated, had a laugh, and apologised whenever he made mistakes.
Dont say sorry, Granddad, I told him. Its braver to start from scratch than to pretend you already know.
Weeks went by.
And one rainy afternoon, while I was doing my homework, I saw him hunched over that same storybookthe one I had handed him years before.
He looked over at me, cleared his throat, and asked,
Shall I read you one?
I was speechless.
He turned the first page. Slowly.
And in a shaky voice, he began,
Once upon a time there was a boy who dreamed of touching the stars.
He didnt get very far. Mixed up a few words. Paused. Chuckled.
But he tried.
And when he finished the story, with no small effort and a bit of pride, he wiped away a tear and said,
Thats the first story Ive ever read.
No, Granddad, I said softly. Thats the day you wrote your own.
These days, he keeps a notebook where he copies down phrases he likes. He sticks them on the fridge. Sends me voice notes reading newspaper headlines. He says he doesnt need to know everything, but he quite likes understanding the things he once ignored out of shame.
And just the other day, I saw him reading out loud in the village square, a little boy sat on his knee.
The boy watched him the way I used towide-eyed, filled with wonder.
As if he knew all there was to know.
And maybe, just maybe, he does.
Because not everything you need to know is in a book.
But some things areand my granddads determined not to miss out on them any longer.






