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I Miss My Grandmother Who Passed Away



Granny would stand at the flat window on the sixteenth floor and wait for my uncle to come back from work. She would only start cooking then as she wanted the food to be warm for him. It could be a simple fish or meat with rice and soup. Sometimes she'd open a can of baked beans for me. My favourite dish was her mashed potatoes.

Those years with Granny made me see how much she cared for those in the family from her children to her grandchildren. Granny lost a child during the Japanese Occupation of Singapore. It was in the 1940s and people lived in wooden shacks then. She had, sometimes in her living years, recounted that there was a huge deafening explosion outside the house. I did not know then that there was a casualty because she did not mention the child that was killed. Perhaps the memory of it was too painful for her.

Post traumatic stress manifested in the form of extreme anxiety later whenever any one of her grown children came back late. She would pace up and down the small flat, clutching the rice cooker. Sometimes she would call people on the phone and mutter to herself when they did not seem to be concerned. I saw it when I had my stays with her during my school holidays. At that time, I did not know about the history of her suffering. I did not even know it as a psychological condition. I just knew that it made me extremely sad. And I cried often seeing her like that.

Sometimes I see her again in my mind's eye dialing the phone and mumbling to herself. Most times, my image is of her back, at the kitchen window, her face leaning against the metal rails. And soon the sun would set.
JustNik · 51-55, F
You bring her to life for us with such love and compassion. ❤️
novembermoon · 51-55
Thanks for reading, Nik. @JustNik
JustNik · 51-55, F
Cierzo · M
Your stories are always so touching 😓.

Some past facts can haunt us for the rest of our lives. Your granny's mind associated the fact that one of her children came back home late with something back happening to them.

We are so fragile. A single moment may change our whole life.
novembermoon · 51-55
Sometimes I wonder what our lives are made of. Those events that happen or the memories of them. Maybe both. @Cierzo
Wraithorn · 51-55, M
That's a really touching story. I think it means so much because it is reminiscent of the way so many mothers have felt in every single country on Earth because of war.
I find it really frustrating that each side in a conflict is fighting with "honour" for their families /country/ culture/ ancestors etc. Many soldiers go to war with "God" on their side in order to ease their conscience. It's all just so stupid considering that we all have common ancient ancestors.
People like your grandmother have my utmost respect.
novembermoon · 51-55
@Wraithorn what you say is true. And the generations before us lived such hard lives. Yet these lives are often not documented, although they are remembered somewhat. In the bigger scheme of things, it is always about how much we have 'progressed' but little about the individual lives of the ones we love and how much they have had to cope with daily living.
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novembermoon · 51-55
@Stereoguy hahaha. We did not have that then in that flat. It was very basic, but enough. And we have summer all year round 😝. You are lucky to have the seasons, really.
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novembermoon · 51-55
@sspec thank you for your encouragement, my fren!
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